China Monitors Skype to Suppress the ‘Quit the Chinese Communist Party’ Movement
Posted by chinaview on October 11, 2008
From Citizen Lab’s special report Breaching Trust, it’s easy to find out a fact that the reason of China’s concern of Skype messages is because of its concern of the big wave of “quit the CCP” movement, which is known by many Chinese but ignored or self-censored by western medias.
Let’s have a look at some of the paragraphs in the report:
“Many of the politically sensitive messages logged by TOM-Skype make reference to the The Epoch Times and Falun Gong linked campaign that encourages Chinese citizens to quit the Chinese Com-munist Party (CCP).
“In 2005 the “Global Service Center for Quitting the CCP” was set up to encourage Chinese citizens to quit the CCP. This campaign uses “[t]elephone, mobile phone text messages, chat-ting online” to contact Chinese citizens and provide them with information that is critical of the CCP and highlights the persecution of the Falun Gong.
“This campaign has made extensive use of Skype including Skype “public chats” and SkypeCast.
” While the campaign uses Skype extensively, they also warn users of the filtering capabilities of the Chinese version distributed by TOM-Skype. However, many users contacted by members of the cam-paign are using TOM-Skype, resulting in numerous logged text chat messages on TOM-Skype servers in China.
“In fact, they are quite open about exactly who they are and what they are doing. Thus it is
trivial to identify users associated with the campaign.
“我是全球退党服务中心的义工
(I am a global service centre for volunteers to quit the party [machine translation])
” Without further testing we are unable to conclusively determine that the objective is surveillance rather than filtering. However, we do know that regardless of the process the full messages are being logged and could be used for surveillance. Moreover, many of these messages contain words that are too common for extensive logging, suggesting that there may be criteria, such as usernames or who one has chatted with, or particular public chats, that determine how fine-grain the logging should be.”
According to the “Quit the CCP” website (in Chinese), there are more than 43 million Chinese people announced publically to quit from the Chinese Communisty party and its affiliated organizations.
This entry was posted on October 11, 2008 at 10:58 pm and is filed under China, Freedom of Speech, Human Rights, News, Party withdrawal, Politics, Social, World, all Hot Topic, censorship. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.




























