[iwar] [fc:China:.Lawmakers.protest.e-mail.blocks]

From: Fred Cohen (fc@all.net)
Date: 2002-03-05 19:54:12


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Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2002 19:54:12 -0800 (PST)
Subject: [iwar] [fc:China:.Lawmakers.protest.e-mail.blocks]
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China: Lawmakers protest e-mail blocks

[FC - but they don't stop the junk email from being bounced through
their sites...]

By Reuters 
March 4, 2002, 1:25 PM PT

Delegates to China's parliament are reproaching Western Internet
administrators for blocking e-mails from China in a growing fight over the
cross-Pacific flow of junk e-mail.

Academics among the 2,987 provincial deputies attending the annual meeting
of the National People's Congress also called for laws punishing the
distribution of junk e-mail, or "spam," the Xinhua news service reported on
Monday. 

Marketing groups, or "spammers," often relay junk e-mail through Chinese
Internet service providers, causing much of the junk e-mail filling screens
in the United States to appear to come from China.

The spammers--many of which have had their own IP (Internet protocol)
addresses blacklisted--use servers in China and other Asian countries
because they are not monitored as closely and are left open as anonymous
springboards for junk e-mail.

According to a report last month on Wired News, a growing number of network
administrators in the United States and Europe have begun blocking e-mails
from servers in China, Taiwan and Korea.

"It is absolutely impossible to isolate China on the Internet today when the
exchange of information is so frequent," Xinhua quoted Yang Lu, a computer
expert at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, as saying.

"The majority of the junk mail (is) not created in China, so why (should)
they block mail from China?" said Zeng Xiaozhen, a professor at Jilin
University in the northeastern province of Jilin. He said spam was a global
issue and China should make a law to punish creators of junk e-mail.

Separately, in a signed article posted on the Web site of China's party
mouthpiece newspaper, the People's Daily, Xu Detian called upon the National
People's Congress to pass a law banning the sending of junk e-mail.

E-mail is popular among China's more than 33.7 million Internet users, who
on average have about 2.2 e-mail accounts each, according to the China
Internet Network Information Centre, China's semi-official Internet
authority. 

Some of them have had trouble sending e-mails to friends and relatives in
the United States in the past few weeks because of the blocks, China's
Southern Weekend newspaper said in an article posted on its Web site on
Monday. 

The newspaper said tens of thousands of companies and Web sites in the
United States and Europe have blocked all e-mail coming from Chinese
servers. 

Peter Lovelock, director of Beijing-based consultancy MFC Insight, said the
National People's Congress might be swayed to pass laws calling for more
rigorous management of Internet-linked servers in China in order to avoid
international embarrassment.

Story Copyright  © 2002 Reuters Limited.  All rights reserved.

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