Activists worry about a new 'Green Dam' in Vietnam
IDG News Service - Human rights activists are worried that new software mandated by Vietnamese authorities may lead to an Internet clampdown in the country's largest city.
In April, local officials issued new regulations covering Internet cafes and service providers in Hanoi, ostensibly designed to crack down on hacking and other service abuses. Buried in the regulations is a mandate that service providers must add special software to their domain servers, used to authenticate systems on the network.
Under the new rules, domain servers must install a copy of the "Internet Service Retailers Management Software," the regulations state.
Nobody quite knows what the software is, but activists in the U.S. worry that it may be used to clamp down on Internet usage in a country that has seen more and more grassroots information-sharing on social networks over the past year.
"There are now 25 million Vietnamese online and the government is afraid that the people have a venue that is relatively free of censorship where they can exchange their views," said Duy Hoang, a spokesman with Viet Tan, a pro-democracy political party that is critical of the Vietnamese government. "The government doesn't want independent sources of information," he said.
"This recent move by the Hanoi authorities is definitely an obstacle toward Vietnamese people using the Internet," Hoang added. He worries that the government-mandated software will be similar to China's Green Dam censorware.
Last year China tried to force PC makers to ship Green Dam with all computers sold in the country, saying the software would help crack down on online pornography. But Chinese authorities eventually backed off from their plans after critics raised a host of privacy, security and system stability concerns, and Chinese Internet users showed no interest in installing the program.
Whether the Retailers Management Software is censorware is unclear, however. Given the government's vague description of the product, it's unclear what it does, said Alex Halderman, a University of Michigan assistant professor who analyzed Green Dam last year. "This might be for blocking; it might be for surveillance," he said. "We don't know. This isn't enough information."
Still, he's interested in studying it.
There is at least one major difference between this software and Green Dam, however: the Retailers Management Software lives on a server, not the desktop.
Local media reports say the software was developed by the National University of Hanoi, and is expected to be installed in all of the city's 4,000 Internet cafes by 2011, Hoang said.
The Embassy of Vietnam in Washington, D.C., did not return messages asking about the software on Friday.
No matter what Hanoi's new management software actually does, the fact that government-controlled software is going into Internet cafes will have a chilling effect on Internet usage, said Kim Pham, outreach director with AccessNow, a group that provides technology support for human rights activists. "This is a public directive intended to let people know the government wants to monitor communications," she said.


- Excel 2010 Cheat Sheet
- Register for this Computerworld Insider Cheat Sheet and gain access to hundreds of premium content articles, guides, product reviews and more.
- Establishing a Strategy for Database Security is No Longer Optional
- The options for securing increasingly valuable databases are very broad and deep, and can be confusing. This research provides an overview of three...
- Driving Secure Enterprise File Sharing and Syncing in the Enterprise
- GroupLogic's new activEcho is the industry's only secure Enterprise File Sharing and Synching solution that balances the need for simplicity for the end...
- The Enterprise File Sharing Option
- Enterprises and IT departments need to address several critical security issues when considering file sharing and syncing products. Many of today's solutions do...
- Activities Streams Base An Integrated Social Layer
- The enterprise social software market is exploding thanks to converging trends of consumerization, cloud, and mobile. In this must-read report, "The Forrester Wave:...
- Converged Infrastructure for Dummies
- As you know, everything is mobile, connected, interactive, and immediate. This is exactly why organizations need a highly agile IT infrastructure in order... All Applications White Papers
- Delivery Management -- Extending Lifecycle Management
- Date: Wednesday, June 20, 2012, 1:00 PM EDT
Siloed organizations continue doing the wrong things and doing things wrong, leading to increased costs,... - Leverage automation today to reduce IT complexity
- Date: Tuesday, June 5, 2012, 2:00 PM EDT
Whether your B2B complexity is caused by multiple technologies due to M&A, business or application specific... - BMC Control-M - Single Point of Control Demo
- With BMC Control-M, you schedule and manage everything - down to the very last platform and application - from one simple interface. It's...
- Operational Analytics - Changing the Competitive Dynamics of the Business
- Date/Time: June 5, 2012, 11:00 a.m., EDT, 4:00 p.m. BST / 3:00 p.m. UTC
Please join us for this webcast, as Dr. Barry... - Oracle Database Appliance Best Practices
- Business users increasingly demand 24x7 availability of their data while IT departments face the challenge of ensuring maximum availability while operating with limited... All Applications Webcasts