China decides the Internet is good

Mark Ralston/AFP Has China’s Communist Party reversed its position on Internet cafes? Beijing has been notoriously suspicious of the country’s 120,000 Internet cafes for years, and has staged high profile crackdowns on many. Just two months ago, the government announced a moratorium on the opening of new Internet cafes for one year. Today, however, a party official seemed ...

601610_070529_internetcafe_05.jpg
601610_070529_internetcafe_05.jpg

Mark Ralston/AFP

Mark Ralston/AFP

Has China’s Communist Party reversed its position on Internet cafes? Beijing has been notoriously suspicious of the country’s 120,000 Internet cafes for years, and has staged high profile crackdowns on many. Just two months ago, the government announced a moratorium on the opening of new Internet cafes for one year.

Today, however, a party official seemed to signal that the current policy is hopeless. Zhang Xiaoliang, chief of the Communist Youth League Central Committee’s rights protection division, said that access to the Internet is—wait for it—a right. Well, sort of. Here’s what Zhang said today:

A healthy environment and healthy online content should be offered to all kids […] You can’t stop kids using Internet cafes just because they are poorly managed.”

Of course, it has to be the right kind of Internet, which is, presumably, a highly censored Internet. Still, beginning Friday, China’s Law on the Protection of Minors will declare:

Nonprofit Internet service infrastructures within communities shall be free or offered at a discounted price, as well as provide a safe and healthy online service for minors.”

So all kids should not only have access to the Internet, but it should be free or at least very inexpensive. I guess it’s a start.

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