CCIA Appreciates US Letter Objecting To China’s ‘Green Dam’
6/24/2009
Washington – The Computer & Communications Industry Association
expressed appreciation Wednesday that two U.S. Cabinet secretaries
raised the issue of Internet censorship with Chinese officials. In a
joint letter submitted to Chinese officials Wednesday, US Trade
Representative Ron Kirk and Commerce Secretary Gary Locke asked the
Chinese to revoke the order that all personal computers sold in China
after July 1 contain Web-filtering software.
The following statement can be attributed to CCIA President & CEO Ed Black:
“US
trade officials are right that this requirement for Web-filtering
software by the Chinese could violate terms of China’s obligations
under the World Trade Organization.
“We appreciate the
US government getting involved on an issue that impacts, trade, privacy
and ultimately human rights. For too long US companies have had
insufficient support from the US government and have had to negotiate
directly with other nations’ on requests for technology and support for
their efforts to censor or spy on their citizens. Our government, and
those who are committed to democracy, should have been out there
creating the rules of the road when it comes to freedom on the
Internet.
“This letter is a good initial step. It
signals Internet freedom will be an increasingly important issue for
this administration. We hope the Chinese will reconsider and not demand
tools to easily expand Internet censorship and spying on Chinese
citizens. But the problem is not just with the Chinese. It’s a global
issue.”
Contact:
Heather Greenfield
202-783-0070 ext 113
Ed Black
202-783-0070 ext 110