winning press freedom
conference
How do you surpass the Great Firewall of China? By fighting fire with
fire.
The Chinese government has put in place the most pervasive Internet
filtering system in the world.
But as Professor Ronald J. Deibert, a world-renowned expert in the
technical aspects of the Internet, told the Paris conference, he has
designed software that is available free to find doors through that infamous
Firewall.
How to Penetrate the Great Firewall of China
By Prof. Ronald Deibert
OpenNet Initiative (ONI) works with the Berkman Institute and with
Cambridge University and the Citizen Lab, a global intelligence agency.
We’re involved in the technical end of things. Methodology involves
contextual research methods, test, and analyze the meanings. In some
countries the research we do is considered espionage.
It’s critical and also risky. There are probably 100 researchers in
total. ONI Asia is new. This is a large operation. We use a spectrum of
methods using remote probes. This is where we connect to computers as proxy
from Canada.
We make requests for web sites as if we were in the country. Our request
in Beijing for Human Rights Watch was dropped, but we can find it in Canada.
Next, we move to portable tools. People traveling to the country,
download software into their laptops, and we control through a shell account
that allows us to test 24/7.
We have 2 main baskets, the global lists and the local lists. Human
rights, pornography, and in the local lists are put together by local
people, URLs in local languages that the local people expect will be under
investigation. More than 20 languages were used in local tests. We’re
running tests right now in 71 countries.
We’ve done studies in 2004-2005 and 2006-2007 in China, and now and
ongoing. Filtering in China has been covered by others. We categorize China
as the most pervasive of filtering in the world. No matter where you connect
in China, you reach filtering at the backbone.
There are three methods they use:
- DNS tampering, where the routers interfere with the system that
cross-references with the domain names and the numerical addresses. It
gets redirected to a non-existent site,
- IP blocking where the numbers are blocked. This method is common
around the world and leads to collateral blocking. Many domains share
the same IPs. Keyword filtering is achieved in the URL. It gets
filtered. Our testing will show it if there is a movement to scan
content for keywords. There are laws that proscribe and constrain what
can occur on line. The laws that punish the user and cybercafes
complement the technical filtering that occur there.
- Skype filtering goes on there as well.
Self-discipline pacts occur in business, as well. These are an extension
of a climate of self-censorship.
What’s going to happen at the Olympics? Steve Wilson said it’s a contract
situation, that press freedom is to exist. There have been a few sites that
are being unblocked, mostly English web sites, such as the BBC. There will
be a lot of English language content that will be blocked. Foreign
journalists likely won’t be looking at local, Chinese sites.
After the Olympics, what will happen? My guess is that restrictions will
be rolled back.
There are many ways people in China get around key word filtering or the
DNS problem is by entering the numerical URL. The Web address www.BBC.cn was
blocked but if they entered the numerical URL, it’d work. One method the
Chinese use is to connect to proxy computers based outside the country.
People have to keep looking for a new proxy and you don’t know if it’s being
set up by an unreliable source.
We wanted to set up a reliable method to get around censorship. We wanted
to create something not so much technical as social. With Psiphon, you set
it up privately and you give it to trusted friends only. We bundle all the
steps into one small application and give to someone in a censored country.
It was released in December of 2006, and there’s been 150,000 downloads
since it was released. It’s encrypted, so it looks like an electronic
transaction.
We’re working on a web-based Psiphon. The service will operate thousands
of nodes that are assigned to groups and organizations. We’ve been working
with a number of human rights organizations in Tibet and Burma. It extends
even further ease of use. This will be the next generation of Psiphon. In a
censored country, a person could give connectivity to friends and family
members.
We’ve produced a guide to by-pass Internet censorship for citizens
worldwide. It’s been translated into a variety of languages.
We learned that the American government was running proxy services and
broadcasting to Iranian service. The service was entirely plain text (not
encrypted) and so the Iranian government had access to it. There were crude
porn filters that were filtering themselves.
Professor Ronald J. Deibert is Director of the Citizen Lab, Munk
Centre for International Studies at the University of Toronto, and is
Co-Founder of the OpenNet Initiative.
|