Obama attacks the
hand that feeds him
Obama
Attacks China for Creating US-Inspired Spying Apparatus
President
Obama has harsh words for China’s proposed counterterrorism law.
This despite the fact that the new rules are modeled largely on the
US regulations, and more directly, on the precedent set by the NSA’s
spying apparatus.
3
March, 2015
China
released a few demands last week. If US tech companies want to do
business in China – and given the market size, yes, tech companies
want to do business in China – then they’ll have to place servers
in China. They’ll also have to provide encryption keys, and allow
the Chinese government special surveillance access into their
systems.
President
Obama is, understandably, a little wary. Tech companies are weary.
Giving a global superpower “backdoor” access to servers used by
millions of people feels a bit like Big Brother. It’s uncomfortably
dystopian.
But
as the Snowden documents revealed, this is exactly the kind of
unfettered access enjoyed by the United States.
“This
is something that I’ve raised directly with President Xi,” Obama
told Reuters. “We have made it very clear to them that this is
something they are going to have to change if they are to do business
with the United States.”
This
is a very different tune than the one sung earlier this year, when
both President Obama and Prime Minister David Cameron expressed their
intention to pressure tech giants into cooperating with Western
intelligence agencies.
“We’re
still going to have to find ways to make sure that if an al-Qaeda
affiliate is operating in Great Britain or the United States that we
can try to prevent real tragedy,” Obama said during a joint news
conference. “And I think the companies want to see that as well.
They’re patriots, they have families that they want to see
protected.”
Homeland
Security Secretary Jeh Johnson listens at left as President Barack
Obama speaks at the National Cybersecurity and Communications
Integration Center in Arlington, Va., Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2015
Though
these two statements are spaced only six weeks apart, they couldn’t
be further at odds with each other. On the one hand, Obama sees
digital surveillance as a crucial tool of patriotism, vitally
necessary to stem the tide of terrorism both foreign and Ń‹domestic.
On
the other hand: not when China does it.
Coincidentally,
this dire need for national security is the same tactic taken by the
Chinese government. In calling for this counterterror law, leaders in
Beijing cite the dangers posed by religious extremists in the region
of Xinjiang.
“As
you might imagine tech companies are not going to be willing to do
that,” Obama told Reuters.
Prime
Minister Cameron and President Obama outside the West Wing of the
White House.
But
many tech companies have done that in the past. As the Guardian
reported in 2013, the Snowden documents revealed that Microsoft
provided the NSA with direct access to encrypted messages. Even last
year, both the FBI and NSA warned Internet companies not to use
encryptions that law enforcement couldn’t crack.
Given
that China is one of the world’s largest, rising economies, it may
prove too tempting a market for tech companies to ignore. Especially
if these “new” business conditions are ones they’ve already
been forced to follow for years, now
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