China is requiring personal computers sold in the country to carry software that blocks online pornography and other Web sites.
The edict could give one of the world’s most sophisticated censorship regimes even more control over the Internet.
The software’s developer said Monday that the tool would give parents more oversight by preventing computers from accessing sites with pornographic pictures or language.
Jinhui Computer System Engineering Co., which won a government contract to develop the “Green Dam-Youth Escort” filtering software, was compiling a database of sites to block.
Although porn sites are initially targeted, the software could be used to block other Web sites too, including those based on keywords rather than specific Web addresses.
Parents can also add their own sites to the blocking list, said Zhang Chenmin, general manager of Jinhui.
“If a father doesn’t want his son to be exposed to content related to basketball or drugs, he can block all Web sites related to those things,” Zhang said.
He said users could disable blocking of any site on the list or even uninstall the software, but they will not be able to see the full database.
He said the software does not monitor or send data to third parties.
China, which has the world’s largest population of Internet users at more than 250 million, also has one of the world’s tightest controls over the Internet.
Through such mechanisms as network-level filters installed at the nation’s Internet service providers, the government routinely blocks political sites, especially ones it considers socially destabilizing, such as sites that challenge the ruling Communist Party, promote democratic reform or advocate independence for Tibet.
The government also bans Internet pornography and this year launched a nationwide crackdown that led to the closing of more than 1,900 Web sites.
Web sites including Google and Baidu, China’s most popular search engine, also have been criticized for linking to suspect sites.
John Palfrey, an Internet censorship expert at Harvard University, described the latest requirements as “a potential game changer in the story of Internet control” by moving China’s “Great Firewall” closer to the user, where censorship can be more effective.
Although users can unblock sites or uninstall the software, many won’t bother or know how, Palfrey said.
There’s also the possibility of the software leaving traces, he said, giving users a false sense of security if the software blocks or monitors usage anyhow — or giving users enough uncertainty that they’ll practice self-censorship.
“One of the most effective parts of China’s controls is self-censorship, the perception that you are being watched or blocked,” Palfrey said in an interview from Washington, D.C.