Study: Chinese Skype service censoring messages
Published: 02 Oct 2008 14:30 BST
TOM-Skype, eBay's joint venture in China, is recording customer text chats and censoring them if they contain certain keywords related to topics that the government deems objectionable, according to a report by researchers in Canada.
"TOM-Skype is censoring and logging text chat messages that contain specific, sensitive keywords and may be engaged in more targeted surveillance," concludes the report, released on Wednesday, from the Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto.
"What is clear is that TOM-Skype is engaging in extensive surveillance, with seemingly little regard for the security and privacy of Skype users. This is in direct contradiction of Skype's public statements regarding their policies in China," states the report.
The keywords that trigger action include words related to Taiwanese independence, the banned religious group Falun Gong, and political opposition to the Chinese Communist Party, states the report.
The service also routinely logs and captures millions of records that include personal information and contact details for any text chat and voice calls placed to TOM-Skype users, including calls from Skype users, the researchers found.
Not only is the data collection suspect, but there are inadequate safeguards to protect the privacy of the TOM-Skype users, according to the report. The records and information needed to decrypt the log files are kept on servers that are accessible by the public.
"This is the worst nightmares of the conspiracy theorists around surveillance coming true," Ronald J Deibert, associate professor of political science at the University of Toronto, told The New York Times. "It's X-Files without the aliens."
Representatives from eBay did not immediately respond to emails seeking comment on the report.
Credit: Report: Skype service in China recording, censoring messages from CNET News










