US develops new technology to penetrate through Chinese Internet censors
February 6th, 2011 - 3:06 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Feb 6 (ANI): The U.S. government has reportedly figured out ways penetrate through Internet censorship filters to deliver news and other vital information to people in countries like China via e-mails.
The official report from the Broadcasting Board of Governors has detailed successful testing the agency conducted last year as it tried to slip data into inboxes in Hong Kong and China, Fox News reports.
The testing involved technology known as Feed Over e-mail, or FOE, to bypass traps the Chinese government has in place to screen out unwanted Internet content.
According to experts behind the testing, this information weapon probably could not have done much good in a situation like that ongoing unrest in Egypt, where the government had taken the step of blocking Internet access to combat the political disturbances.
“If there’s a blackout … nothing works,” BBG Director of Information Security Ken Berman said.
However, the agency’s testing has claimed that, at least in China, it could be effectively used to transmit everything from RSS feeds to downloadable files to proxy web addresses, which users can access to browse an uncensored version of the Internet.
Sho Ho, the IT specialist who designed the technology over the past couple years, said the system, which is still undergoing testing, effectively compresses data so it can go undetected, and then it decodes that information so the user on the other end can see it, the paper added.
Berman said the technology could be used as part of BBG’s Internet anti-censorship program, which tries to penetrate systems like China’s “Great Firewall.”
“We’re trying to foster that freedom of inquiry. Sho’s tool is a different approach to helping solve the same problem,” he added. (ANI)
- Chinese hacker leaks data of six mn people - Mar 22, 2012
- Firewalls can help hackers break into Facebook, Twitter - May 22, 2012
- Don't open strange mails or attachments, officials told (Lead) - Apr 08, 2010
- Cyber security tips for external affairs ministry officials - Apr 08, 2010
- China says US using Internet freedom pitch as pretext for interfering in others' internal affairs - Feb 18, 2011
- Cyber attacks, censorship threat to internet freedom: Study - Apr 18, 2011
- New sorting function for Gmail - Sep 12, 2010
- New software to access blocked websites - Aug 11, 2011
- How natural disasters, political unrest affect Internet usage - Apr 05, 2011
- BSNL launches Bharat Berry push e-mail service - Nov 14, 2011
- 'Security agencies unable to decrypt intercepted communications' - Aug 17, 2011
- Jaipur IT firm to help BlackBerry users stay connected - Oct 10, 2010
- Earthlink Webmail: The New Mailing System In Your iPhones - Nov 19, 2010
- Malicious software links featuring bin-Laden's pics could be a virus: FBI - May 04, 2011
- Less than one-third of Mexicans have internet access - May 19, 2011
Tags: blackout, board of governors, broadcasting board of governors, chinese government, chinese internet, e mail, foe, fox news, information security, information weapon, internet censorship, internet content, ken berman, political disturbances, proxy web, successful testing, uncensored version, unwanted internet, vital information, web addresses