Home Internet Who will shape the internet of the future? – DW – 05/24/2024

Who will shape the internet of the future? – DW – 05/24/2024

Right now, two competing versions of the internet are evolving. The US-based version is dominated by companies like Meta, Alphabet and Apple, which are leading consumption and commerce.

The Chinese internet, on the other hand, is designed as a service and surveillance platform. Chines companies such as ByteDance, Alibaba and Tencent have almost unrestricted market sovereignty in this internet.

The Chinese version is being promoted by Beijing in as the “Digital Silk Road,” as a digital arm of the wider Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

A recent report from the London-based think Article 19 on China exporting “digital repression in the Indo-Pacific” says that “China is seeking to influence global norms through technical standards and multilateral forums,” for example, by organizing the annual “World Internet Conference,” which has been held in China since 2014.

“China’s ambition to become a global technological superpower by developing the technology and policy to reshape global norms,” the report says.

The Chinese model emphasizes “digital sovereignty,” a concept that promotes internet fragmentation “in contrast to the universality of human rights and internet freedom principles.”

China’s idea of the internet also rests on state control and focuses on “cybersecurity, censorship and surveillance,” it adds.

How China is reining In its tech titans

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One origin, two systems

There are two different world views behind these two versions of the internet, which becomes evident when looking at differences in how the internet is regulated in the US and China.

In a recent essay, “variants of digital capitalism: A comparison of China and the US,” Stefan Schmalz, a sociologist at the University of Erfurt in Germany, said the difference is based on “guaranteeing entrepreneurial freedom” in the US, while in China national security, and, therefore, political considerations, play a key role.

Both versions of the internet are still based on the same basic technology (HTML, TCP/IP, etc.). However, they have diverged in the age of Web 2.0.

In Web 2.0, which has existed since the turn of the millennium, easy-to-use applications provided by tech giants, such as Instagram, WhatsApp and Amazon, dominate the landscape.

Parallel platforms have been developed in China. WhatsApp is WeChat in China. For the vast majority of users, both versions represent two separate worlds that do not communicate with each other.

China cuts its own digital path

China began to decouple itself from the US-dominated internet, at the latest, in 1998. At that time, the Chinese Communist Party created a “great firewall” to filter unwanted content from abroad.

In 2010, Google withdrew from China as it was unable to agree on censorship guidelines with the government, among other things.

This was followed in 2011 by the establishment of the now renamed Cyberspace Administration of China, which regulates the national internet and is responsible for online censorship. It also organizes the World Internet Conference.

In this way, the party created a sharply defined market with 1.4 billion Chinese users, in which its own digital companies grew and prospered.

And China’s internet has seen some level of success, as is evident in the growth of Chinese internet giants that are no quite competitive with those in the US.

For example, the only social network that does not originate from the US, and is nevertheless globally competitive, is TikTok, which originated in China.

The struggle to shape the internet of the future

However, as the case of TikTok shows, China is no longer content to decouple itself, but seeks to expand and play a leading role in developing key technologies.

TikTok challenges potential US ban in court

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The rivalry with the US on this front involves the interplay of corporate, political and geopolitical interests.

Huawei, one of the world’s most important telecommunications equipment and hardware companies and the largest provider of 5G technology, is a prime example.

Critics in the US and the West repeatedly accuse Huawei of providing a Trojan horse for Chinese authorities with its technology, as it is ultimately obliged to provide information to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).

In their book “The Silent Conquest,” Clive Hamilton and Mareike Ohlberg describe Huawei as the best example of “how the CCP  combines espionage, intellectual property theft and influence operations.”

Huawei has always denied allegations of data transfer to the CPP, and to this day there is still no proof that Huawei actually installs so-called “backdoors” for espionage.

The divide grows

Despite this, the division of the internet continues to spread. In November 2022, for example, the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) banned the import and marketing of certain Huawei products in the US for national security reasons. 

At the end of 2023, China issued a directive stating that government computers should not use Intel chips or Microsoft software as soon as possible.

The US under the Biden Administration has also sought to cut off China from accessing critical semiconductor technology.

Third countries that do not have their own tech industry are increasingly having to decide which camp to join.

For a long time, the US was the leader, but in the Indo-Pacific, and particularly in Cambodia, Pakistan and Thailand, and also in Malaysia and Nepal, China has clearly gained influence, according to think-tank Article 19.

No other country has gone as far as Cambodia. “It is the best example of how the country is embracing Chinese-style digital authoritarianism. Since 2021, Cambodia has been working to introduce its own version of the Great Firewall as part of a ‘National Internet Gateway,'” the Article 19 study says.According to the authors, China is increasingly successful in curtailing the free, open and interoperable internet with its Digital Silk Road.

Who benefits from China’s surveillance technology?

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This article has been translated from German

“Decoding China” is a DW series that examines Chinese positions and arguments on current international issues from a critical German and European perspective.

 

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