Skip to main content

Tag: Online surveillance

No Scaling the Wall in Hubei

China has long sought to control what its citizens see online, restricting access to foreign platforms and content that might challenge the dominant framing, or “public opinion guidance” (輿論導向), of the Chinese Communist Party. Actions taken earlier this month by police in Hubei could be a sign that authorities are moving more concertedly against individuals using VPNs to bypass internet controls, a process referred to as “scaling the wall” (翻牆). On March 11, police in two Hubei cities published administrative penalty notices against individual citizens for doing exactly that.

On March 8 in the river city of Ezhou, a man was fined 200 yuan (about 27 USD) after authorities discovered he had used a proxy tool to access TikTok and X. In the nearby city of Xiaogan, ten police officers had raided a man’s home months prior for similar activity, resulting in a 500 yuan (69 USD) fine. In both cases, the men were issued formal administrative warnings (警告) and ordered to cease unauthorized international networking (責令停止聯網). Previously, law enforcement focused on developers and commercial operators of circumvention tools. Individual VPN use, while technically against the rules, was largely tolerated under a tacit understanding that citizens could bypass the firewall for personal purposes — accessing social media or foreign news — as long as they did not challenge the state. By some estimates, China has as many as 90 million VPN users.

A Not-so-Simple Question

A Taiwanese woman was arrested on April 22 after she posted a simple question to social media inquiring whether one of the country’s most prominent political figures had passed away. The woman — oddly identified in local media reports as simply a “44-year-old unemployed woman” — was charged with violating Taiwan’s Social Order Maintenance Act (社會秩序維護法) by posting the question: “Has Chen Chu died?” on the PTT Bulletin Board System (批踢踢), the largest terminal-based bulletin board system in Taiwan. Chen Chu (陳菊), president of the Control Yuan and chairwoman of the National Human Rights Commission since 2020, is one of Taiwan’s most prominent political figures, and was jailed as a political dissident during the country’s martial law period. The woman facing charges for violating social order claimed that she was responding to an unspecified Threads post about “a celebrity passing away” while remembering news of Chen’s hospitalization. Kaohsiung Medical University Hospital “quickly denied the rumors,” according to a report from Central News Agency, stating Chen’s rehabilitation is “stable and continuously improving.” Police tracked the woman through her IP address within four hours. She later apologized, addressing Chen by a popular nickname, writing: “Flower Mom (花媽), I’m sorry to have caused you such a disturbance.”

Chen Chu pictured in August 2020. SOURCE: Wikimedia Commons.

|