Recent
reports that China has imposed further restrictions on Gmail,Google’s
flagship email service, should not really come as much of a surprise. While
Chinese users have been unable to access Gmail’s site for several years now, they
were still able to use much of its functionality, thanks to third-party
services such as Outlook or Apple Mail.
This
loophole has now been closed (albeit temporarily – some of the new restrictions
seem to have been mysteriously lifted already), which means determined Chinese
users have had to turn to more advanced circumvention tools. Those unable or
unwilling to perform any such acrobatics can simply switch to a service run by
a domestic Chinese company – which is precisely what the Chinese government
wants them to do.
Such
short-term and long-term disruptions of Gmail connections are part of China’s
long-running efforts to protect its technological sovereignty by reducing its
citizens’ reliance on American-run communication services. After North Korea saw its internet access blacked out temporarily in theInterview brouhaha – with little evidence that
the country actually had anything to do with the massive hacking of Sony – the
concept of technological sovereignty is poised to emerge as one of the most
important and contentious doctrines of 2015.
And it’s
not just the Chinese: the Russian government is pursuing a similar agenda. A
new law that came into effect last summer obliges allinternet companies to store Russian citizens’ data on servers inside the
country. This has already prompted Google to close down its engineering operations in Moscow. The Kremlin’s recent
success in getting Facebook to block a page calling for protests in solidarity with the
charged activist Alexey Navalny indicates
that the government is rapidly re-establishing control over its citizens’
digital activities.
But it’s
hardly a global defeat for Google: the company is still expanding elsewhere,
building communications infrastructure that extends far beyond simple email
services. Thus, as South American countries began exploring plans to counter
NSA surveillance with a fibre optic network of their own that would reduce
their reliance on the US, Google opened its coffers to fund a $60m undersea
cable connecting Brazil to Florida.
The aim
was to ensure that Google’s own services run better for users in Brazil, but it
is a potent reminder that extricating oneself from the grasp of America’s tech
empire requires a multidimensional strategy attuned to the fact that Google
today is not a mere search and email company – it also runs devices, operating
systems, and even connectivity itself.
Given that
Russia and China are not known for their commitment to freedoms of expression
and assembly, it is tempting to view their quest for information sovereignty as
yet another stab at censorship and control. In fact, even when the far more
benign government of Brazil toyed with the idea of forcing American companies to store user
data locally – an idea
it eventually abandoned – it was widely accused of draconian overreach.
However,
Russia, China and Brazil are simply responding to the extremely aggressive
tactics adopted by none other than the US. In typical fashion, though, America
is completely oblivious to its own actions, believing that there is such a
thing as a neutral, cosmopolitan internet and that any efforts to move away
from it would result in its “Balkanisation”. But for many countries, this is
not Balkanisation at all, merely de-Americanisation.
US
companies have been playing an ambiguous role in this project. On the one hand,
they build efficient and highly functional infrastructure that locks in other
countries, creating long-term dependencies that are very messy and costly to
undo. They are the true vehicles for whatever is left of America’s global
modernisation agenda. On the other hand, the companies cannot be seen as mere
proxies for the American empire. Especially after the Edward Snowden
revelations clearly demonstrated the cosy alliances between America’s business
and state interests, these companies need to constantly assert their
independence – occasionally by taking their own government to court – even if, in reality, most
of their interests perfectly align with those of Washington.
This
explains why Silicon Valley has been so vocal in demanding that the Obama
administration do something about internet privacy and surveillance: if
internet companies were seen as compromised parties here, their business would
collapse. Just look at the misfortunes of Verizon in 2014: uncertain of
the extent of data-sharing between Verizon and the NSA, the German government
ditched its contract with the US company in favour of Deutsche Telekom. A
German government spokesman said at the time: “The federal government wants to
win back more technological sovereignty, and therefore prefers to work with
German companies.”
However,
to grasp the full extent of America’s hypocrisy on the issue of information
sovereignty, one needs to look no further than the ongoing squabble between Microsoft and the US government. It
concerns some email content – relevant to an investigation – stored on
Microsoft’s servers in Ireland. American prosecutors insist that they can
obtain such content from Microsoft simply by serving it a warrant – as if it
makes no difference that the email is stored in a foreign country.
In order
to obtain it, Washington would normally need to go through a complex legal process
involving bilateral treaties between the governments involved. But now it wants
to sidestep that completely and treat the handling of such data as a purely
local issue with no international implications. The data resides in cyberspace
– and cyberspace knows no borders!
The
government’s reasoning here is that the storage issue is irrelevant; what is
relevant is where the content is accessed – and it can be accessed by
Microsoft’s employees in the US. Microsoft and other tech giants are now
fighting the US government in courts, with little success so far, while the
Irish government and a handful of European politicians are backing Microsoft.
In short,
the US government insists that it should have access to data regardless of
where it is stored as long as it is handled by US companies. Just imagine the
outcry if the Chinese government were to demand access to any data that passes
through devices manufactured by Chinese companies – Xiaomi, say, or Lenovo –
regardless of whether their users are in London or New York or Tokyo. Note the
crucial difference: Russia and China want to be able to access data generated
by their citizens on their own soil, whereas the US wants to access data
generated by anybody anywhere as long as American companies handle it.
In
opposing the efforts of other countries to reclaim a modicum of technological
sovereignty, Washington is likely to run into a problem it has already
encountered while promoting its nebulous “internet freedom” agenda: its actions
speak louder than its words. Rhetorically, it is very hard to oppose
government-run digital surveillance and online spin in Russia, China or Iran,
when the US government probably does more of it than all of these countries
combined.
Whatever
motivates the desire of Russia and China to exert more control over their
digital properties – and only the naive would believe that they are not
motivated by concerns over domestic unrest – their actions are proportional to
the aggressive efforts of Washington to exploit the fact that so much of the
world’s communications infrastructure is run by Silicon Valley. One’s man
internet freedom is another man’s internet imperialism.
Evgeny Morozov, The Observer, 04.01.2015
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