Chinese Authorities Enforce Switch from Microsoft
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HONG KONG-Authorities in the southeastern Chinese city of Nanchang are
requiring all local Internet cafes to replace their Microsoft Windows XP
operating systems with a Chinese-made system, Red Flag Linux, officials
and Internet cafe owners have told Radio Free Asia (RFA).
An official with the Nanchang Cultural Discipline Team, which oversees
the roughly 600 internet cafes operating in Nanchang city, said the new
operating systems were mandatory.
"We have already started installing the new software in all Internet
cafes. All of them must have this new one," he told RFA's Mandarin
service.
The switch was mandated by the Nanchang Cultural Management Bureau in
what it said was an effort to crack down on pirated software, local
sources said.
But cafe managers said the new system requires a licensing fee of 5,000
yuan (about U.S. $726), and that even legitimate, non-pirated copies of
Windows XP were being replaced.
"Our district cultural management authorities came and installed the new
Red Flag Linux in all of our 13 Internet cafes," one cafe worker said.
"It happened around Nov. 20, and we all paid the 5,000 yuan installation
fee, even though we used to use legally purchased Windows XP. But I
don't think this new system is as good as the old one."
A new, legitimate copy of Windows XP costs around 899 yuan (about U.S.
$130) in China, plus 15 yuan for shipping.
Unwelcome switch
Whether Nanchang authorities were enforcing an order from higher up, and
whether the directive might apply elsewhere in China, wasn't immediately
clear.
An Internet cafe owner surnamed Chen said the switch was
unwelcome."Every Internet cafe has to install the new software though
none of us wants it. There's no other choice," he said.
"We've been facing a number of new charges. Not long ago, the police
asked us to install personal ID scanners for 3,800 yuan (U.S. $550). Now
we're charged for this new software. We don't know what we will be
charged for next. So I wouldn't pay, and I'm closing my business."
Cafe owners complained online this week about paying licensing fees for
an operating system that can be downloaded free for personal use.
"How much of the charge goes to the Red Flag Linux Co. and how much to
the cultural management authorities in Nanchang?" one post read.
An employee at Red Flag Linux's developer, Beijing Zhongke Red Flag
Software Co., confirmed that the system is free for personal use but
couldn't comment on whether businesses are ever required to buy
licenses.
Suspected censorship
Xiao Qiang, director of the China Internet Project at the University of
California-Berkeley, said he saw the move to Linux as an effort to
tighten censorship and step up surveillance online.
"It mainly means [a] less secure and private communication environment
for netizens in those Internet cafes," Xiao said. "The authorities are
gaining more control."
"China has a vast number of small Internet cafes, and a huge proportion
of them are in a quasi-legal area. By forcing all Internet cafes to
change operating systems, the authorities are making them register...and
therefore all kinds of policing and surveillance software will be
installed at all these large and small Internet cafes as well."
Red Flag Linux was created by the Software Research Institute of the
Chinese Academy of Sciences in 1999. Financial backing came from a
government-owned firm, ShangHai NewMargin Venture Capital.
According to the U.S.-based Business Software Alliance, Chinese piracy
accounted for almost U.S. $6.7 billion in losses in 2007, up from U.S.
$5.4 billion a year earlier.
Original reporting by Ding Xiao for RFA's Mandarin service. Translated
by Chen Ping. Mandarin service director: Jennifer Chou. Written and
produced in English by Sarah Jackson-Han.
Radio Free Asia is a private, nonprofit corporation broadcasting and
publishing online news, information, and commentary in nine East Asian
languages to listeners who do not have access to full and free news
media. RFA's broadcasts seek to promote the rights of freedom of opinion
and expression, including the freedom to "seek, receive, and impart
information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers."
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