Washington has expressed concern to Beijing over its new effort to censor Internet use and its possible impact on trade and access to information, the U.S. Embassy said Monday.
The U.S. pressure comes as Chinese Web surfers are lobbying the communist government to scrap its plan to require the Internet-filtering Green Dam Youth Escort software on personal computers. It is to be pre-installed or included on a compact disc with all PCs sold in China starting July 1.
American diplomats met Friday with officials of China's ministries of commerce and information technology to express concern and seek more information about the system, the U.S. Embassy in Beijing said.
"The U.S. is concerned about actions that seek to restrict access to the Internet as well as restrictions on the internationally recognized right to freedom of expression," the embassy said in a statement.
"The U.S. Government is concerned about Green Dam both in terms of its potential impact on trade and the serious technical issues raised by use of the software," it said. "We have asked the Chinese to engage in a dialogue on how to address these concerns."
Chinese officials say the Internet filtering as an effort to block access to violent and pornographic material. But Internet users have ridiculed the system and some are circulating petitions appealing to the government to scrap it.
China, which has the world's largest population of Internet users at more than 298 million, also has one of the world's tightest controls over the Internet. The government bans online pornography and this year launched a nationwide crackdown that led to the closing of more than 1,900 Web sites.
upside down, the public security (police) pickup
so-called underground gang
so-called underground gang blocked the entrance and exit of the city - Nankang
so-called underground gang
Express Administration SUV rolled over by so-called underground gang
In order to restrict the management on Clinical Applications of the 3rd Medical Technology, the ministry of health of China drafts out the Regulations on Administration of transsexual operation technology and releases it to public.
The Consultative Draft points out the minimum requests of hospital, doctor and patient.
The patient who want a transsexual operation needs to satisfy following conditions:
Additional conditions (request)
So the road for a man or woman to receive a transsexual operation in China is not that smooth. To be a gay in China is one thing, to change gender is another.
Anyway the regulation open a gaps for those guys who believe them self should be the other gender.
Deal Journal admits it, we are captivated by the sale of General Motors’ Hummer brand to a Chinese buyer. That someone wants to buy a brand of noted gas-guzzlers in an era fixated on climate change. The “mysterious” Chinese acquirer: Sichuan Tengzhong Heavy Industrial Machinery.
A review of the Chinese press gives more details on who is behind Tengzhong. The modest-size company may have stronger financial backing for a deal than had been thought.
Huatuo Industry Development founded Sichuan Tengzhong Heavy Industrial in 2008 with registration capital of $21 million, according to China’s Daily Financial News. The founder of Huatuo is Yan Li, reputed to be one of the richest people in Sichuan province, say Chinese auto analysts. China’s People Daily Web site estimated Li’s assets at more than $730 million.
Chinese publications say Morgan Stanley has been working to get Huatuo a U.S. stock listing. That isn’t moving along as quickly as they hoped, says Shanghai Business Daily. Morgan Stanley has helped Huatuo raise more than $100 million in the last few years, it said.
The deal “is a reflection of the increasing number of Chinese companies that are buying U.S. assets as a short cut to build their names,” said Scott Laprise, CLSA’s China auto and steel analyst. “That’s why they are buying big names.”
In this, Tengzhong is following Lenovo Group, the Chinese company that purchased the PC-making arm of International Business Machines, and BYD, which disclosed in September a $230 million investment in the battery maker by Warren Buffett. Both companies acquired increased exposure and name recognition at the same time. The “Hummer deal might help jump start the process” for Tengzhong, Laprise said.
While many believe the deal will have difficulty garnering regulatory approval in China, others said they wouldn’t rule out the possibility that the government will support the deal so that Hummer’s technology could be used to improve China’s military vehicles. Andrew Chen, an investment manager for Foreopen.com in Pittsburgh, who has been following the deal closely, said Sichuan historically has been a home for production of Chinese military automobiles. He speculated that the government may be encouraging the deal and might even help get loans for the buyer.
At the same time, Tengzhong is buying a nameplate with a comsumer cache. Last year, domestic sales surged for many higher-end cars, like Land Rover and Lamborghini, among others. “Chinese want expensive cars. The bigger the better,” Laprise said.
General Motors Corp., seeking to shed assets to emerge from bankruptcy, agreed to sell the Hummer sport-utility vehicle brand to China’s Sichuan Tengzhong Heavy Industrial Machinery Co.
Tengzhong will assume Hummer’s dealer agreements and a senior management team, the companies said in a joint statement yesterday. GM and Tengzhong also plan to form a long-term contract assembly and supply agreement. Hummer is worth an estimated $500 million, GM said in bankruptcy court documents.
Selling Hummer will secure more than 3,000 U.S. jobs and help GM move toward a goal of offloading four U.S. brands to exit bankruptcy as a leaner, more profitable company. The deal may also help Tengzhong grow in China’s SUV market, which surged 25 percent last year on rising affluence.
“There are a lot of new rich in China who like niche brands such as Hummer,” said Ricon Xia, a Daiwa Institute of Research (H.K.) Ltd. analyst in Shanghai. “A lot of private companies like Tengzhong have emerged because of the economic boom and they will strike more surprising deals like this one.”
Detroit-based GM has won court approval to sell assets as soon as next month after collapsing under $172.8 billion in debt and failing to adapt to consumer demands for cars that use less fuel. GM also plans to sell Saturn and Saab and wind down the Pontiac line. Sixteen potential buyers have expressed interest in Saturn, Chief Financial Officer Ray Young said on a conference call yesterday.
Tengzhong’s Expansion
For Tengzhong, a privately owned maker of special-use vehicles, structural components for highways and bridges, and construction machinery, buying Hummer will add a brand with cachet it can use to expand in emerging markets, said Desmond Wong, chief executive officer of Chicago-based Sino Strategies Group.
“This is a good acquisition for Sichuan Tengzhong and a good sale for GM,” said Wong. “They can do the manufacturing and marketing in the U.S., but in addition to that they can produce Hummer elsewhere for markets such as China, India and the Middle East.”
The Hummer sale should be completed by the end of the third quarter. Credit Suisse Group AG is acting as financial adviser and Shearman & Sterling is serving as international legal counsel to Chengdu, China-based Tengzhong. Citigroup Inc. is acting as financial adviser to GM.
Chinese Deals
Tengzhong follows SAIC Motor Corp., China’s biggest domestic automaker, and Geely Holding Group Co. in pursuing overseas acquisitions as Chinese automakers seek technology to build more sophisticated and profitable vehicles. Sichuan, where Tengzhong is based, is also a mountainous province full of winding roads suitable for off-road vehicles.
Still, Chinese automakers haven’t always benefited from overseas deals. SAIC bought rights for cars designed by U.K. automaker MG Rover Group Ltd. in 2005 to temper its reliance on partners GM and Volkswagen AG. Last year, GM and Volkswagen vehicles still accounted for more than 90 percent of sales. SAIC’s South Korean unit, Ssangyong Motor Co., entered receivership in February after sport-utility-vehicles sales plunged.
Geely, China’s biggest private automaker, in March agreed to buy Australian gearbox-maker Drivetrain Systems International. The carmaker is also in talks to buy Ford Motor Co.’s Volvo Car Corp. unit, according to people familiar with the situation.
U.S. Support
GM is getting more than $50 billion of loans from the U.S. government to help reorganize after filing for bankruptcy earlier this week. Bill Burton, deputy White House press secretary, reiterated in an e-mailed statement President Barack Obama’s pledge to take a “hands-off” approach to GM.
The U.S. government “is not going to get involved in the day-to-day business decisions of GM -- and this is an example in which it did not,” Burton said. “GM reached an agreement that will keep thousands of Americans working in a situation that could have ended instead with a devastating liquidation of this company.”
GM bought the license for the Hummer brand from AM General in 1999 and started selling the $140,000 H1, a 7,600-pound (3,400-kilogram) SUV patterned after the all-terrain military vehicle popularized for road use by actor Arnold Schwarzenegger, now California’s governor.
While the H1 never sold more than 875 units a year, the model won enough of a following for GM to add the 6,600-pound H2 in 2002. The 4,700-pound H3 followed in 2005. GM also started building the H3 in South Africa in 2006 for Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
Rising gasoline prices eventually eroded demand. GM halted production of the H1 in 2006 as sales dwindled.
Hummer’s U.S. deliveries peaked at 71,524 that year, according to Autodata Corp. U.S. sales of the SUVs, which start at about $31,000 for the H3, fell 51 percent in 2008 and 67 percent this year through April.
Daily Economy reported that China Tengzhong which wanna buy Hummer is also lost a lot in financial crisis, now Tengzhong has difficulties in paying 470 thousand RMB/CNY ( about $ 68753 )to Chengdu Mayi Group for a long time.
According to Chengdu Mayi Group's lawyer, Zhu Shi, Tengzhong should pay on June 30th 2008 based on an agreement which signed on June 22th.
Chinese media are start to consider Tengzhong as a dirty player in propagandizing, instead of a good player in global market.
So no one believe Tengzhong is still capable of purchasing Hummer.
China is requiring personal computers sold in the country to carry software that blocks online pornography and other Web sites, potentially giving one of the world's most sophisticated censorship regimes even more control over the Internet.
The software's developer said Monday 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, Zhang Chenmin, general manager of Jinhui, told The Associated Press.
"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 completely, 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 shuttering 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.
And though the software isn't currently designed for monitoring usage, Palfrey said a future update could give it surveillance capabilities, something easier to implement once the basic software is already on PCs.
A Washington-based industry trade group, the Computer & Communications Industry Association, denounced China's efforts "to build censorship capabilities right into the hardware."
"Blocking access to pornography sounds like an acceptable goal, but the problem is that it's all too easy to use the same technology to expand the censorship," the group's president, Ed Black, said in a statement.
Zhang said his company, based in Henan capital of Zhengzhou in central China, signed a 21 million yuan ($3 million) contract with the Chinese government last May to develop the software and distribute it to computer makers for free within one year. The software was jointly developed by Beijing Dazheng Language Technology Co. Ltd., which declined to comment.
According to The Wall Street Journal on Monday, China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology sent computer makers a notice on May 19 that PCs to be sold in China as of July 1 must be preloaded with the software.
The program would either be installed on the hard drive or enclosed on a compact disc, the newspaper reported, adding that PC makers would be required to tell authorities how many PCs they have shipped with the software.
The ministry did not immediately respond to questions from The Associated Press by phone or fax. A separate notice on its Web site said all primary and secondary schools were required to install the Green Dam software on every school computer by the end of last month.
Educators "should fully realize the damage that harmful online information does to the physical and mental health of primary and secondary school students," the notice said.
In a statement, Palo Alto, Calif.-based Hewlett-Packard Co. said it is working with the Information Technology Industry Council, a trade group, to "seek additional information, clarify open questions and monitor developments on this matter."
The trade group declined official comment Monday. PC makers Lenovo Group of Beijing, Dell Inc. of Round Rock, Texas and Apple Inc. of Cupertino, Calif., did not immediately respond to e-mail and phone requests for comments.
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