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China's propaganda chief says Cold War mentality hindering mutual trust in cyberspace

Published 10/20/2019, 09:26 AM
Updated 10/20/2019, 09:26 AM
© Reuters. A Baidu sign is seen at the World Internet Conference (WIC) in Wuzhen

By Josh Horwitz and Yingzhi Yang

WUZHEN, China (Reuters) - A "Cold War mentality" and "bully behavior" are hindering mutual trust in cyberspace, China's propaganda chief said on Sunday at the start of the World Internet Conference in the eastern Chinese town of Wuzhen.

Huang Kunming, head of the publicity department of China's ruling Communist Party, also said that under the pretext of national security, some countries had launched cyber attacks on countries and enterprises.

Huang did not specify which countries he was referring to.

"The Cold War thinking and zero sum game, this has stopped and hindered exchanges in cyberspace. Also, bully behavior in cyberspace has had a negative impact on mutual trust," he said.

"By using national security as an excuse, some countries have attacked some countries and enterprises. This has increased the uncertainty, opposition and negativity in cyberspace."

The state-run World Internet Conference, one of the country's most prominent tech conferences, takes place this year against a backdrop of rising U.S.-China tensions that has especially overshadowed the tech sector.

Washington has barred U.S. firms from exporting to certain Chinese tech companies through trade blacklists and the two countries have slapped tit-for-tat tariffs on each other in a intensifying trade war, which has also hit tech supply chains.

China has traditionally used the three-day event, whose attendees this year include Alibaba Group (N:BABA), Baidu Inc (O:BIDU), Microsoft Corp (O:MSFT) and Qualcomm Inc (O:QCOM), to promote its own ideology for global internet governance and defend its highly-policed cyberspace.

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China has been pushing for a bigger role in global internet governance and has called on nations to respect Beijing's "cyber sovereignty", the idea that countries should be free to control and censor their internet infrastructure as they see fit.

The annual conference is organized by internet censorship bureau, the Cyberspace Administration of China, which is responsible for managing China's tight controls over its cyberspace that prevents users in the country from accessing services from the likes of Facebook (O:FB) and Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL).

Latest comments

Cold war was between nations. In a state where you have to openly spy on citizens, a very rich statement indeed(:-
In a world where nothing is hidden anymore and every thing is brought to light, China is fighting a losing downhill battle trying to censor the internet. Sure it could delay knowledge from its people, but the truth will always prevail because it will forever lay in unrest.
In a world where nothing is hidden anymore and every thing is brought to light, China is fighting a losing downhill battle trying to censor the internet. Sure it could delay knowledge from its people, but the truth will always prevail because it will forever lay in unrest.
Says China as they just recently paraded all their Arsenals. NICE
free internet for free people
Someone should ask this guy who his favorite NBA team is. Bullying behavior?
the great firewall of China /censorship doesnt help either... Chinese are complaining about internet trust?!? Ironic ...
Irony is also causing distrust
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