Chinese educational institutions named in connection with cyber-attacks on Google have denied involvement, state media said on Saturday, as differences festered between Beijing and the Internet giant.
The New York Times reported on Thursday that the cyber-attacks aimed at  Google and dozens of other firms had been traced to Shanghai Jiaotong University  and the Lanxiang Vocational School, which the newspaper said had military  backing. The paper cited anonymous sources for the report.
Google vowed  last month to stop bowing to Internet censors in China in the wake of  sophisticated cyber-attacks aimed at the US firm’s source code and at Gmail  accounts of Chinese human rights activists around the world.
A  spokesperson for Shanghai Jiaotong University told Xinhua news agency: “We were  shocked and indignant to hear these baseless allegations, which may harm the  university’s reputation.”
“The report of the New York Times was based  simply on an IP [Internet Protocol] address. Given the highly developed network  technology today, such a report is neither objective or balanced,” the  spokesperson said.
Li Zixiang, party chief at the Lanxiang Vocational  School in Shandong Province, also named in the report, said: “Investigation …  found no trace the attacks originated from our school.”
Li denied a  relationship between the school and the military and rejected links made in the  report to a computer science class taught by a Ukrainian  professor.
“There is no Ukrainian teacher in the school and we have never  employed any foreign staff,” Li told Xinhua. “The report was unfounded. Please  show the evidence.”
Lanxiang teaches vocational skills such as cooking,  auto repair and hairdressing, while the computer science class offers only basic  courses, Xinhua reported.
The director of the school’s general office,  Zhou Hui, said 38 students had been recruited by the military since 2006 “for  their talent in auto repair, cooking and electric welding.”
Following its  January comments, Google has continued filtering searches in line with Chinese  law, while trying to negotiate a compromise with officials.
Google  cofounder Sergey Brin said this month he hoped the Internet powerhouse would  find a way to operate in China without censoring Web search results.
“I’m  optimistic,” Brin said during an on-stage chat at the prestigious TED Conference  in Long Beach, California, on Feb. 12. “I want to find a way to really work  within the Chinese system and drive more information.”
“A lot of people  think I’m naive, and that may be true, but I wouldn’t have started a search  engine if I wasn’t naive,” he said.
Brin declined to place odds on the  chances of Google working out a compromise that would allow unfettered online  searches in China, saying only that while it wasn’t likely to happen now it  might “in a year or two.”
He defended Google’s decision to launch a  filtered google.cn search engine in China in 2006, saying the company’s presence  in that market “made a big difference, but things started going downhill after  the [Beijing] Olympics.”
“We intend to stop censoring,” Brin said. “We  don’t want to run a service that is politically censored.”
Source: Taipei Times 2010/02/22



 









