Vietnam To Police Blogs With Random Checks, Self-Reporting
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BANGKOK-Vietnamese authorities plan to police the content of dissident
blogs through random checks and self-policing by the country's blogging
community, a senior Vietnamese Internet security expert has told Radio
Free Asia (RFA)
"There should be a legal corridor to assure better operation of the
blogs," the director of the state-run Bach Khoa Internet Security
Center, Nguyen Tu Quang, told RFA's Vietnamese service. "We'll manage
them by randomly checking-we don't need to control all the blogs."
"When we create a legal corridor, determining what is legal and what is
a violation of Vietnamese law, the blog community will detect such
things on its own and will let the government know of violations," Quang
said.
Earlier this month, Information and Communication Deputy Minister Do Quy
Doan was quoted as saying Hanoi would seek cooperation from Internet
giants Google and Yahoo! to help "regulate" the country's flourishing
blogging scene.
The government will soon announce new rules, stressing that Weblogs
should serve as personal online diaries and not organs to disseminate
opinions about politics, religion, and society, senior officials were
quoted as saying.
The regulations aim "to create a legal base for bloggers and related
agencies to tackle violations in the area of blogging," said Information
and Communication Deputy Minister Do Quy Doan, according to the official
Thanh Nien daily.
The ministry "will contact Google and Yahoo! for cooperation in creating
the best and the healthiest environment for bloggers," he added.
Quang, speaking in a telephone interview, said getting help from Google
and Yahoo! would be helpful but not critical. "Our effort to detect
blogs will be more convenient if we can get help from the Internet
companies," he said, but added: "We can detect blogs without help from
Internet companies."
Quang said under the draft rules being debated violators could face up
to U.S. $12,000 in fines and up to 12 years of jail time.
Wary of online content
According to recent government figures, nearly one in four Vietnamese
use the Internet. Activity in Vietnam's blogosphere has recently
increased and Hanoi is becoming more wary of online content it considers
politically threatening.
Authorities currently block some Web sites run by overseas Vietnamese
that espouse views critical of the government, and they often seek to
shut down anything seen as encouraging public protest.
In September, blogger Dieu Cay was jailed for 2-1/2 years on tax evasion
charges after he tried to persuade people to protest at the Olympic
torch ceremonies in Ho Chi Minh City last summer.
Reporters Without Borders, a press freedom monitoring group, called on
authorities to release the cyber-dissident, whose real name is Nguyen
Hoang Hai, and said that he was being unjustly targeted because of his
outspoken criticism of China's claims over disputed South China Sea
islands.
Vietnam's government is also extremely cautious of internal issues that
could anger its northern neighbor.
Abide by local laws
Robert Boorstin, director of policy communications at Google, said his
company hadn't been contacted with a specific request from the
Vietnamese government but is aware of the plans to further regulate
bloggers in the country.
"We believe that blogs are an expression of a person's personal
opinions, whether those opinions concern culture, art, their daily life,
or politics-whatever they want to talk about. We don't censor based on
the content of blogs and would not want to do so," Boorstin said.
Boorstin said Google censors "a great deal less" than other search
engines around the world, but he added, "If we don't abide by local
laws, we will be thrown out" of certain countries.
He said that Google's policy in China, where authorities restrict much
of what may be accessed by netizens, is to filter results from its
search engine according to local laws, but to clearly show users that
results are blocked.
Google also refuses to offer its email or blogging service in China
because this would force the company to operate servers within the
country from which authorities could request personal information about
users.
"That is the kind of place where we draw the line and say 'No, we're not
going to venture into those kinds of services because the risk to
individual freedom and the risk to our users' privacy is too great,'"
Boorstin said.
"We push the limits as far as we can push them without being told to
pack up our bags and leave the country, because we don't want to leave
countries where we're providing a service of information to people. It
may not be every single piece of information that we want them to have,
but much better they have access to huge new quantities of information
than the other choice, which is to show them nothing at all."
Original reporting by Mac Lam and Thien Gao for RFA's Vietnamese
service. Vietnamese service director: Diem Nguyen. Executive producer:
Susan Lavery. Written for the Web in English by Joshua Lipes and Sarah
Jackson-Han.
Radio Free Asia is a private, nonprofit corporation broadcasting and
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