Olympic Sport Tries Extending Its Reach

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taly’s triumphant Olympic fencers are using their fighting skills to stay in the limelight and promote their sport now that interest has waned after the Beijing Games.

The fencing team drew wide attention after it brought home two individual gold, two individual bronze and three team bronze medals.

The swashbucklers have used media appearances at home to great effect, knowing that soon the focus will return to more traditionally popular sports like soccer and auto racing.

Diego Confalonieri, who won bronze in the team épée, wants to avoid the fate of most smaller Olympic sports that must wait until the 2012 Games in London for another 15 minutes of fame.

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Murdoch’s Fox Turkey wins 2014-2016 Olympic rights

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Rupert Murdoch’s media group scored another Olympic coup Friday when it was awarded the Turkish broadcast rights to the 2014 and 2016 games.

The International Olympic Committee announced the deal with Fox Turkey, part of the Fox entertainment network owned by Murdoch.

It is the IOC’s third Olympic deal with a Murdoch channel in Europe this year, and second this month. On Oct. 21, SKY Italia was awarded the 2014 and 2016 rights in Italy, following the contract announced in February for the 2010 and 2012 games.

Fox Turkey will provide coverage on free-to-air television, pay channels, and through the Internet and mobile phones.

The value of the contract was not disclosed. It covers the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, Russia, and the 2016 Summer Olympics. The 2016 host city will be chosen next October, with Chicago, Madrid, Tokyo and Rio de Janeiro the finalists.
“Fox Turkey presented a comprehensive package that will allow not only the broadest coverage of the Olympic Games but also the promotion of Olympic sports and Olympic values beyond the 16 days of competition,” IOC president Jacques Rogge said in a statement.

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Beijing Olympic Games 2008 drive lots of sports internet traffic

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Interest in the Beijing Summer Olympics and the start of the football season drove a 26-per-cent boost in August traffic on U.S. sports websites viewed at work, a unit of Nielsen Co. said Thursday.
The number of unique visitors accessing sports websites from their office locations grew to 42.3 million in August, up from 33.4 million last year, according to Nielsen Online.

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“With broad interest in the Olympics, and the ramp up of the college and professional football seasons, August was a busy month for online sports fans,” Jon Gibs, vice-president of media analytics at Nielsen Online, said in a statement.
“The Web offered 24/7 access to news, results and video, and fans demonstrated a healthy appetite for information about their favorite athletes and teams,” he added.
NBC Universal’s NBC Olympics website, custom built for the Beijing Games, reached 20 per cent of the active at work online population, or slightly more than 13.8 million unique visitors, Nielsen said. Those visitors stayed for a long look, spending an average of 57 minutes and seven seconds at the website.
Yahoo Sports was the No. 1 online sports destination at work with 18.7 million visitors, more than double last year’s numbers, Nielsen said.

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Olympics drive strong U.S. August sports web traffic

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Interest in the Beijing Summer Olympics and the start of the football season drove a 26 percent boost in August traffic on U.S. sports websites viewed at work, a unit of Nielsen Co said on Thursday.
The number of unique visitors accessing sports websites from their office locations grew to 42.3 million in August, up from 33.4 million last year, according to Nielsen Online.
With broad interest in the Olympics, and the ramp up of the college and professional football seasons, August was a busy month for online sports fans,” Jon Gibs, vice president of media analytics at Nielsen Online, said in a statement.
The Web offered 24/7 access to news, results and video, and fans demonstrated a healthy appetite for information about their favorite athletes and teams,” he added.

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Jackie Chan says he’s not upset about small role in Olympics

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Jackie Chan

Action movie star Jackie Chan said Wednesday he was not upset about his small role in the Beijing Olympics’ opening and closing ceremonies because he was happy to play any part in promoting the games.
The world’s best-known ethnic Chinese movie idol sang along with other singers at the end of both ceremonies, while the spotlight instead fell on retired Chinese gymnast Li Ning who soared - suspended by wires - around the upper, inner rim of the Bird’s Nest Stadium to light the Olympic cauldron.
“I don’t question my role. When the Beijing Organizing Committee beckons, I’m there,” the 54-year-old actor known for his daredevil stunts said Wednesday, noting that he passed on two commercials and a movie to help promote the games.
Chan spoke after being named an honorary professor at the Savannah College of Art and Design at a ceremony in Hong Kong.
In his blog, Chan said he and his fellow performers waited for 10 hours before appearing in the closing ceremony.
“No one asked, ‘Why are we stuck in this situation?’ We just felt very honoured and very happy that we participated in the Beijing Olympics,” he said Wednesday.
However, Chan said in his blog that he got bored during the wait and went into the stands to watch the closing ceremony, which caused a distraction.
The actor said the Olympics helped improve China’s image.
“We let the whole world see a China that’s different from the China in the past. It’s an athletic China, a new China, a clean China, a China that has never been seen before,” Chan said.
Chan said he offered to transport the Olympic torch suspended from a helicopter when he was a torch bearer during the torch relay in the southern Chinese beach resort city Sanya, but organizers rejected the idea as too dangerous.
“If something happened and I had to sacrifice myself for the country, I would feel very honoured,” he said.

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Software can bypass China’s ‘Great Firewall,’ but hard to get inside country

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Internet users trapped behind China’s so-called “Great Firewall” are finding ways to scale the wall, but experts say software programs that allow unfettered access to the web are often cumbersome and difficult to find from inside the country.

China’s efforts to restrict access to the Internet have faced renewed criticism during the Beijing Olympics, especially after international journalists discovered their access was still affected despite earlier promises by Olympic officials.

The government uses sophisticated technology to filter content, blocking information about topics such as the Tiananmen Square massacre, the Dalai Lama and the outlawed Falun Gong spiritual movement.

The Communist regime argues the restrictions are necessary to protect national security and ensure the “healthy growth” of Chinese youth, but critics condemn them as repressive, undemocratic limits on freedom.

“We face so many shared global problems right now, you need some kind of global communications medium through which citizens around the world can communicate and share ideas,” says Ronald Deibert, director of the University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab.

“We need to find ways to protect these commons as something essential for what you might call planetary democracy to thrive.”

Two years ago the Citizen Lab released a program called Psiphon, which allows users in countries such as China and Iran to circumvent their governments’ Internet censorship.

The free software uses computers outside the censoring country - known as proxies - to fetch web pages and send them back over encrypted connections.

The technique is also used by a host of other tools, but Deibert says the goal was to make it as user-friendly as possible.

“That can be quite a time-consuming, laborious process, and we created this really simple program that anyone should be able to operate,” says Deibert.

Groups like the Citizen Lab and Reporters Without Borders have produced how-to guides for getting around Internet censorship.

Some techniques are relatively simple but not very effective, such as using saved or cached pages on search engines.

Other methods are better but more complex, such as “tunnelling” software that hides content inside other forms of Internet traffic.

Another popular option is a browser called Tor, which also uses proxies.

A group of German programmers have created what they call the Freedom Stick, a self-contained version of the Tor browser on a USB drive that the group distributed to German journalists heading to the Beijing Games.

And with a little money and technical know-how, just about anyone can pay for what’s called a virtual private network located outside the country, which essentially uses the same technique as Tor and Psiphon.

There are many options for Internet users in China and other countries to get around web censorship, says German IT security expert Sebastian Wolfgarten, but access to the software and information about how to use it are often blocked themselves.

“It really depends on the access you have to systems located outside of China,” says Wolfgarten.

“We know how to do it, but it’s getting the message across. The pages might be blocked, maybe the people don’t have the knowledge or the ability to install the software.”

Wolfgarten rented a server in China two years ago so he could browse from a China-based connection and examine how exactly the Great Firewall works.

“What amazed me is the sophistication in how the filtering is being done,” says Wolfgarten, who plans to repeat the process to see how the filtering has evolved.

“It’s really pervasive, and from a technical point of view it’s very well done.”

He says the filtering works on multiple levels, including: restricting sites based on their web addresses and domain names; using technology to cut off and freeze connections accessing banned content; and requiring search engines to tailor results if they want to operate in China.

Chinese officials will eventually figure out how to block existing anti-censorship software, predicts Lars Fischer, a German PhD student who came up with the Freedom Stick.

Fischer says when that happens, programmers and hackers will find ways to adapt, but it’s part of a much larger problem that software alone can’t fix.

“It’s a social problem, censorship itself is viral,” says Fischer, a member of the Chaos Computer Club, a group of hackers based in Hamburg, Germany.

“Unwanted information is not normally in the public view because news sites and blogs from the inside have a hard time linking to the outside. You create something that censors itself.”

from: canadianpress.google.com

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China defends pre-Games promises

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China has vigorously defended itself against accusations that it has not fulfilled promises it made when it bid for the Olympic Games.

Top Beijing Olympic official Wang Wei said the Olympics would allow China to open up further to the outside world.

He was responding to criticism about China’s pledges on issues such as human rights and media freedom.

International Olympic officials have voiced disapproval over the detention of a UK journalist covering a protest.

‘Stepping forward’

China has faced a barrage of criticism in the lead-up to the Games on a range of issues, including air pollution.

Critics also say China has failed to improve human rights and accuse it of reneging on a pledge to provide complete media freedom to report the Games.

But in an impassioned speech, Wang Wei, executive vice-president of the Beijing organisers, dismissed the bad publicity.

Speaking at a press briefing, Mr Wang said that when he was secretary-general of the Beijing Olympic bid committee, he was “confronted with many questions”.
“I did say that the Olympic Games coming to China will help China open up further and reform better,” he said.

The fact that China had set up protest areas for its citizens during the Olympics showed it was heading in the right direction, he said.

“I think China has been stepping forward, and if you ask the ordinary Chinese on the streets they will give you the same answer,” he said.

“Everybody is happy. People are optimistic about their own future. That is a fact.”

Mr Wang went on to attack what he termed the small number of people who criticised China. “That does not mean we are not fulfilling our promise,” he said.

Visitors coming to China for the first time would see a different country to the one represented in films and newspapers, he added.

“People will see better for themselves what China is like,” he said.

Despite the comments, International Olympic Committee spokeswoman Giselle Davies, sitting next to Mr Wang, said journalists should be able to do their jobs unhindered.

Her comments come after a British journalist was briefly detained while trying to cover a pro-Tibet protest near the main Olympic venues.

“We don’t want to see it happening again,” she said, referring to the detention.

from: bbc.co.uk

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Media, organizers on collision course

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Communist China and the western media have been heading for a collision ever since the IOC’s daily press briefings began six days ago and unpleasant questions began to be asked about human rights, press freedoms, empty seats, armored personnel carriers parked outside the Main Press Centre, and assorted trickery and deception during the opening ceremonies.

On Thursday, they collided. East vs. West. Bang.

It began under the persistent questioning of Giselle Davies, director of communications of the IOC, who was repeatedly asked whether the IOC was embarrassed to be in Beijing considering the number of promises concerning press freedoms and human rights the organizers have broken since being awarded the Games seven years ago.
It ended with Wang Wei, chief spokesman for the Beijing Games and secretary general of Beijing 2008 bid committee, making an impassioned defence of the reforms China has made and will make because the Games are being staged here. The collision was inevitable. The world’s media has been itching for a fight every day during the briefings. The two sides are deeply suspicious and mistrustful of each other.

You have to wonder if China fully realized what it was getting into when it agreed to let 20,000 journalists in to cover the Games, considering what only a handful can do to the life of a NHL general manager in Canada.

For example, questioners in recent days have asked why no protests have yet been allowed so far in the three parks set aside for protests; why was a British journalist detained during an incident in downtown Beijing even though he was accredited; why hasn’t a Radio Free Asis correspondent of Tibetan descent been given accreditation for the Games; why was an armoured personnel carrier parked outside the Main Press Centre; why wasn’t the public told that certain elements of the opening ceremonies were faked; why hasn’t any information been provided about the dancer who was seriously injured during a rehearsal for the opening ceremonies; why are the stands empty when all the tickets were supposed to be sold.

It hasn’t made life easy for Wang and the Beijing organizers.

The Chinese have gone to enormous expense and trouble to stage a Summer Games that is unlikely to be equaled, in terms of venues and organization.

Yet, all they’re getting is criticism, which they had to be aware they would get in spades.

It will only get worse on Friday, because the Chinese can’t help shooting themselves in the feet.

Usually, the full transcript of the daily briefing is available on the publicly accessible Beijing Olympics site within hours.

On Thursday, six hours after the briefing ended, only half of the transcript - the one without the rancorous exchange over China’s broken promises - was available.

Highlights of it were available on the Games’ Info 2008 site, but that site is only available to journalists within the press centre and venues.

The Chinese version was also different from the English one and some of the questions were missing.

The trouble on Thursday started when Davies was asked whether the IOC was embarrassed because China hasn’t lived up to its pledges of media freedom and transparency during the Olympics.

Specific complaints in recent days have been over complete Internet access and the inability or unwillingness of officials to reveal how many requests have been made to stage protests and how many have been rejected.

Davies initially offered a roundabout response.

“There was certainly some hope and aspirations made in 2001 to have the Games have a positive impact on the wider social framework and I think we have to note that there have been enormous steps forward in numbers of areas,” she said.

“You’re here to report on the Games. The world is watching, and there will be commentaries made appraising how the Games have had an impact to bring sports, athletes and the world’s attention.

“We are very proud of the fact that these Games are progressing with spectacular sports, spectacular sports venues, operationally running smoothly, and that’s what we’re here for.”

Her questioner, a TV reporter from Great Britain, wasn’t buying the answer and wouldn’t let go, but that’s all he was going to get from her.

“We’re very pleased with how the organizers are putting on a good sports event,” she said.

“That’s what this is. This is an event first and foremost for the athlete and the athletes are giving extremely positive feedback about how they see these Games being held.”

Davies continued to be harangued by her questioner, but Sun Weide, chair of the briefing, seized control of the floor and tried to move on to the next questioner.

Before that could happen, though, the Rutgers-educated Wang, who began his professional career as an English teacher, signaled he wanted to speak.

His message was that for the last 30 years China has been making reforms step-by-step, but it was naive to think that one of the world’s oldest civilizations, with a history of states and cultures dating back more than six millennia, could or would make all the remaining changes in the three-week period of the Olympics.

“I was secretary general of the bidding committee,” said Wang.

“I was confronted with many questions about the opening up and the reform of China, and I did say that the Olympic Games coming to China would help China open up and reform better. And the effects show.

“After 30 years of reform, China is developing quickly. People enjoy more freedom and they have a lot to say and the welfare of people has improved a lot.

“Everybody can see that. The Olympic Games are a great platform. Everybody I see who comes to China for the first time will say to me, ‘China is so different,’ from what they read, what they saw in films, and in newspapers. “People are so friendly. People are living a good life. Everybody is happy. People are optimistic about their future.”

He noted that there are of course exceptions. Not everyone is doing better and some people have been disenfranchised. But it’s important to handle those grievances through the legal process because the country can’t be allowed to fall into “chaos.”

China welcomes the world, he said, and China also welcomes suggestions and constructive criticism.

It’s irritating, he suggested, that some journalists have come only to “peek and be critical, to dig into details and find fault with that.”

But finding flaws, he said, doesn’t mean that China is not trying to fulfill its promises.
“I did not say that China would promise to do whatever with the Games in China,” he said.
“I did not say that.
“But I said that the Games will open up the horizon about China.
“People will see better for themselves what China is like.
“You cannot underestimate the wisdom of the Chinese people.
“If you want to come over here and you want to be critical, it’s alright.
“But you have to believe the majority of the people, otherwise I think you are quite misled.”

from: canada.com

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Beijing Olympics: Cops ‘rough up’ journo

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A british journalist was arrested and “forcibly restrained” by Chinese police yesterday while covering a pro-Tibet Olympic demo.

ITN’s John Ray was held for an hour - despite having official accreditation - and his camera crew stopped from filming as eight protesters were arrested at the Chinese Ethnic Culture Park, near the National Stadium in Beijing.

Mr Ray, who was freed after British embassy officials intervened, told a colleague: “I’ve been roughed up.”

from: mirror.co.uk

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China declared safe from pollution for opening ceremony

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China has been declared safe for athletes by the head of the International Olympic Committee, following weeks of speculation over the dangers posed by high levels of pollution in Beijing.

Speaking on the eve of the opening ceremony of the Games, Jacques Rogge praised Beijing’s “extraordinary” efforts to improve air quality.

Mr Rogge praised the Chinese authorities for having done “everything that is feasible and humanly possible to address this situation”.

“What they have done is extraordinary,” Mr Rogge he said.

He also stressed there was no danger to the health of athletes, although if pollution levels worsened some events could be moved or delayed.

His comments come as one air quality reading judged the pollition levels in Beijing far below World Health Organization (WHO) standards.

But Mr Rogge said there was a difference between poor air quality and simple fog.

“The fog, you see, is based on the basis of humidity and heat. It does not mean that this fog is the same as pollution,” he said.

China is in its last hours of preparation for the start of the Games.

But the lead-up to the Games has been marred by controversy.

Several pro-Tibet protesters, including a British man and woman, have been arrested by Chinese police.

World leaders, including US President George W Bush, have also called on China’s Communist Party to improve its human rights record.

The interventions will embarrass the Chinese government who have been keen not to let the issue overshadow the games amid fears of mass protests.

Speaking in Bangkok on his way to Beijing, President Bush said that it was time “to allow the Chinese people” to express their views.

“America stands in firm opposition to China’s detention of political dissidents and human rights advocates and religious activists,” he said. “The United States believes the people of China deserve the fundamental liberty that is the natural right of all human beings.”

She said that while she hoped Beijing would “learn not to be afraid of protest”, westerners who staged demonstrations like the two Britons detained for unveiling Free Tibet posters on Wednesday should understand that China had a different political system.

”My experience of negotiating with China over years is that going for banner headlines and siren diplomacy is not the best way of achieving change,” she said.

The views were echoed by Tessa Jowell, the Olympics minister, speaking to The Daily Telegraph in China but she urged protestors not to disrupt the games.

Jacques Rogge, the president of the International Olympic Committee, said the Games would “help the world to understand China, and it will also help China to understand the world.”

“China is a nation in transition, with a great future, tremendous potential and some challenges,” he said.


from: telegraph.co.uk

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Cisco IP Video Technology to Enable Groundbreaking NBC Coverage of Beijing Olympic Games

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Beijing Olympic Games

Powered by Cisco, NBC to Provide Olympic Experience Anywhere, Anyplace, Anytime to Multiple Delivery Platforms

Cisco (NASDAQ: CSCO) announced today it has been selected to provide Internet Protocol (IP) video network infrastructure and video-encoding solutions to NBC during the network’s coverage of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, Aug. 8-24. Cisco’s IP video infrastructure will enable NBC personnel in New York and Los Angeles to edit video as it is captured in Beijing and deliver it to three screens: TV, PC and smartphone.

Described as one of the most demanding network environments in the world, the groundbreaking trans-ocean network powered by Cisco will enable the transfer of gigabyte-sized files between Beijing, New York and Los Angeles. In previous Olympics, NBC staff had to work from videotapes to add graphics and captions to event shots. In one of the single most ambitious media projects in history, NBC will present more than 3,600 hours of broadcast coverage during the 17-day event. It would be impossible to use a tape library to replicate enough video copies for use at eight different networks as well as NBCOlympics.com. Using a file-based workflow for shot selection, the network can select shots and distribute them to affiliates even before an event is finished.

“With the Cisco network solution, we’ve achieved the Holy Grail of digital video, which is the ability to perform shot selections on low-resolution files and extract high-resolution material from those files even as they are being recorded. That is a huge accomplishment,” said Craig Lau, vice president for Information Technology, NBC Olympics. “Cisco is a trusted partner, and in the demanding IT environment of the Olympic Games, we depend on trusted relationships. We have absolute deadlines for when Olympics coverage begins and ends. Cisco technologies help us exceed expectations and meet our timetables in an unforgiving environment.”

Viewers of NBC’s coverage of the Beijing Olympic Games will be able to use their PCs and laptops to access 2,200 hours of video that they can play back on demand, as well as 3,000 hours of highlights, rewinds, encores and scoring results. Individuals will also be able to watch video and view results on their smartphones.

“We are making broadcast history, executing the creation, management and distribution of digital video in a way that’s never been achieved before,” said Tony Bates, senior vice president and general manager, Cisco Service Provider Group. “We are entering the visual-networking era where video changes everything, especially the way people connect with the Olympic Games. The Olympics is all about the experience. The next best thing to being in Beijing is to be able to see the event coverage. This year, not only are thousands of hours of Olympic coverage being transmitted in real time, but Cisco’s IP video network and encoding technologies are also giving people the ability to access hundreds of event videos on demand using their PCs, laptops and mobile devices for an unprecedented Olympic experience anywhere, anyplace, anytime.”

Through the comprehensive Cisco IP video network infrastructure and video-encoding solutions, NBC was able to address the following technical challenges:

– Creating a high-bandwidth, high-performance connection between Beijing
and NBC studios in New York and Los Angeles to give shot selectors and
editors in the United States the ability to edit video as it is being
captured in Beijing.
– Providing the quality of service (QoS) required to assign priority to
real-time Olympic Games video footage over the trans-ocean network.
– Encoding and transmitting low-resolution (low-res) video from Olympic
venues for broadband viewing. Low-res video uses far less bandwidth, which
enables NBC to provide Internet coverage of more Olympic sports.
– Using a single, converged IP infrastructure for a wide spectrum of
services ranging from the video delivery to data-intensive logistics
applications.

About NBC Olympics

NBC, “America’s Olympic Network,” owns the exclusive U.S. media rights to the Olympic Games, television’s most powerful property, through 2012, which includes Beijing in 2008, Vancouver in 2010 and London in 2012. From August 8-24, 2008 NBC Universal will present an unprecedented 3,600 hours of coverage, highlighted by NBC in primetime with live swimming, gymnastics and beach volleyball. In August 2004, 203 million viewers watched s the networks of NBC Universal — NBC, MSNBC, CNBC, USA, Bravo, Telemundo, and NBC’s HD affiliates — offered a then record 1,210 hours of Olympic coverage from Athens. For additional information, go to NBCOlympics.com, a year-round destination for fans of Olympic sports, featuring news, Beijing previews, athlete features, expert blogs, photos, Olympic video from the NBC archives and social tools enabling users to build communities around their favorite sports, post comments and blogs.

About Cisco Systems

Cisco (NASDAQ: CSCO) is the worldwide leader in networking that transforms how people connect, communicate and collaborate. Information about Cisco can be found at http://www.cisco.com. For ongoing news, please go to http://newsroom.cisco.com.

Cisco, the Cisco logo, and Cisco Systems are registered trademarks or trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. and/or its affiliates in the United States and certain other countries. All other trademarks mentioned in this document are the property of their respective owners. The use of the word partner does not imply a partnership relationship between Cisco and any other company. This document is Cisco Public Information.

For direct RSS Feeds of all Cisco news, please visit “News@Cisco” at the following link:

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Beijing Olympics visitors to come under widespread surveillance

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The government has installed about 300,000 cameras in Beijing and set up a network to spy on its citizens and foreigners.

The blocking of human rights websites in China leading up to the Olympics is part of an information control and surveillance network awaiting visitors that will include monitoring devices in hotels and taxis and snoops almost everywhere.

Government agents or their proxies are suspected of stepping up cyber-attacks on overseas Tibetan, human rights and press freedom groups and the banned Falun Gong spiritual movement in recent weeks. And China is spending huge sums on sophisticated surveillance systems that incorporate face recognition technology, biometrics and massive databases to help control the population.
China has installed about 300,000 cameras in Beijing under an estimated $6.5-billion, seven-year program dubbed the Grand Beijing Safeguard Sphere. Although face recognition software still can’t process rapidly moving images, China hopes that it can soon electronically identify faces out of a vast crowd.

“China is trying to project a picture and a narrative about the Olympics,” said Nicholas Bequelin, Hong Kong-based researcher with Human Rights Watch. “By limiting journalists, shutting down the Internet, arresting activists, it’s hoping to control the message.”

The world’s most populous nation has legitimate concerns, as seen this week in an attack in the far western province of Xinjiang that killed 16 police officers. Few expect the security infrastructure to be even partially dismantled, a step Greece took after hosting the 2004 games.

Critics said these systems give China more advanced tools in its bid to control domestic critics, activists and media. In recent months China has recruited thousands of Beijing taxi drivers and hundreds of thousands of neighborhood busybodies to keep an eye on foreigners and its own citizens.

“Everyone feels they’re entering a police state, which by the way it is, duh,” said Sharon Hom, executive director of New York-based Human Rights in China. “So they’ve got people reporting down to the lowest neighborhood level, which is not new, overlaid by state-of-the-art technology. It’s the best of the old and the new.”

Another technology that raises concern involves the new identity cards China is phasing in for its 1.3 billion citizens. The cards, developed with help from Plano, Texas-based China Information Security Technology, carry radio signal devices and a chip that records not only a person’s height, weight and identification number, but also health records, work history, education, travel, religion, ethnicity, reproductive history, police record, medical insurance status and even his or her landlord’s phone number.

Near the Second Ring Road in downtown Beijing, Wu Naimei, 74, sat on a folding chair fanning herself. “If we see any suspicious people, we call the police and report on them,” the retired subway worker said, adding that she can’t define a suspicious person but knows one when she sees one. “We are happy to help protect our motherland, assist the nation and help our leaders relax.”

The West might have a stronger argument in questioning China’s potential for intrusive surveillance if it weren’t moving rapidly in the same direction. London is believed to have the largest number of closed-circuit TV cameras of any city in the world. Many countries have seen vast troves of personal data lost or stolen. Financial records and phone calls are now routinely monitored.

The difference is that Western countries have better checks on police power, some human rights activists said, even as they expressed concern that the U.S. could soon be using technologies developed in China.

“Every country wants to avoid abuse of police power,” said Xu Zhiyong, a lecturer at the Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications. “It’s getting better in China, but we still have a ways to go.”

In addition to blocking online information about corruption and human rights violations, the government is suspected of collecting information on visitors’ Internet search activity.

Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kan.) said late last month that foreign-owned hotels in China were under pressure to sign contracts authorizing police to install hardware and software to monitor their guests’ Internet activity. Hotel managers contacted in Beijing declined to comment.

This followed a State Department warning in March that “all hotel rooms and offices are considered to be subject to on-site or remote technical monitoring at all times.” Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang quickly called the U.S. report irresponsible and denied that China employed more surveillance than normal.

In Beijing, two taxi drivers who asked not to be identified while discussing confidential matters displayed a pair of black button-sized devices just to the left of their steering wheel linked to the vehicle’s navigation system. They said the devices allow a central monitoring station to listen to anything inside the taxi.

One driver said that besides listening in on passengers, officials can hear any griping he might do about the Communist Party, which could result in punishment.

The Danish women’s soccer team caught two men spying on its members in September during a FIFA World Cup meet in the central Chinese city of Wuhan, Lars Berendt, the group’s communication director, said in a telephone interview from their headquarters in Brondby.

Berendt said team members were in a hotel room having a tactical meeting when they noticed some movement behind what turned out to be a one-way mirror. In an adjoining room, they found two men, at least one of whom wore a hotel badge, and they held them until police arrived.

Berendt said the hotel denied any knowledge of the incident, and the International Olympic Committee and FIFA, the international governing body of soccer, said it was a matter for local authorities. Chinese police haven’t commented on any investigation.

“We’re not holding our breath,” Berendt said.

The state-run New China News Agency quoted fans as saying the Danes were just sore losers.

Security experts say company executives attending the Olympics are being advised to bring computers that have been wiped clean and to safeguard their smart phones. In extreme cases, they are also weighing the laptop to the gram to test whether ultra-light hardware devices have been added.

But a Western security consultant for one Olympic sponsor who asked not to be identified given the sensitive nature of his work said many of these fears were overblown, and that Chinese police had better things to do than spy on every “self-important corporate executive.”

Li Wei, a counter-terrorism expert with the China Institute of Contemporary International Relations, a semiofficial research organization, said most Chinese surveillance was in line with that of other Olympic host nations and didn’t dangerously compromise privacy.

Still, experts such as Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Washington-based Electronic Privacy Information Center and author of a recent report on Chinese surveillance, believe that China is pushing the envelope.

“With Internet controls, there are ways around,” Rotenberg said. “But with surveillance technologies, you’re getting into the fabric of the state.”

source: latimes.com

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China restricts media access to Tiananmen Square

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China has imposed restrictions on the access of Chinese and foreign media to Beijing’s sensitive Tiananmen Square, requiring them to apply in advance to film or conduct interviews there, the city government said on Tuesday.

“To maintain a good order of reporting activities at the square, Chinese and foreign journalists are advised to make telephone appointments with the Administration Committee of Tiananmen Area,” said a notice posted on the official website of the Beijing government.

The notice suggested that the new requirement was introduced because of the use of the square for Olympic-related events expected to draw large crowds.

“During the Beijing Olympic Games, one large-scale cultural event would be held each day at Tiananmen Square,” it said.

“A large number of people would come to the square and enjoy the events,” it said.

China has introduced temporary rules allowing foreign journalists to interview any Chinese citizen who accepts a request before and during the games.

But officials have also warned many Beijing residents to avoid discussing sensitive subjects with foreign media.

Tiananmen Square was the prime site of the 1989 pro-democracy protests, which ended after the ruling Communist Party ordered tanks and troops into the square, in a crackdown that is believed to have cost several hundred lives.

Rights groups and families of victims continue to urge the government to investigate and make a full report of the Tiananmen crackdown.

In recent years, many petitioners from outside Beijing have tried to stage protests in the square.

The government has tightened security and introduced regulations sepcifically for the square in the run-up to the Olympics.

Security guards and paramilitary police check the identities and seach the bags of everyone entering the square.

Members of three to five families staged a small protest near Tiananmen Square on Monday to voice dissatisfaction over housing compensation, state media said.

State media said police ended the protest about 30 minutes after the families began talking to foreign reporters at the redeveloped Qianmen commercial area to the south of the square.

The Beijing Olympic organizing committee, BOCOG, arranged a group tour of the square on Tuesday afternoon for foreign Olympic reporters.

source: bangkokpost.com

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Good Luck Beijing - Giorgio Moroder or China’s application campaign for the Olympics in 1993

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Good luck Beijing” (English) by Giorgio Moroder (1993) from Wei Wei’s collection of songs for the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics. This song was performed first time by Wei Wei as the theme song for China’s application campaign for the Olympics in 1993.

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IOC feels media heat on Internet restrictions

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The International Olympic Committee (IOC) on Saturday faced mounting questions over Internet censorship, days before the Beijing Games, despite earlier pledges that its use would be unfettered.
While China has allowed access to some websites that were blocked earlier in the week, many sites still remain inaccessible to reporters covering the Beijing Olympics that start on Aug. 8. On Friday the IOC had said the issue had been resolved.
“We would like to see the greatest degree of openness,” IOC communications director Giselle Davies told reporters.
“There has been no change in the IOC’s position. The IOC would like to see open access,” she said in response to several questions regarding the IOC’s determination to push through what it had promised.
Some questions led with quotes from IOC officials that the Internet would be free.
“When there were problems on Wednesday, the IOC’s team… met with the organising committee and asked if they could be resolved,” Davies said.
“We can only encourage moving towards that openness and transparency.”
That led to the unblocking of several sites, including human rights group Amnesty International, BBC China and Deutsche Welle news sites.
The issue had caused a major stir days before the start of the Aug. 8-24 Olympics with IOC officials insisting there would be no censorship and Beijing Games Organising Committee (BOCOG) saying sensitive sites would remain blocked by the Communist authorities.
Although Internet access will be relatively free for reporters for the period of the Games, it is still tightly controlled for the rest of the country.
Sites related to spiritual movement Falun Gong, and other issues that are frowned on, are regularly blocked. Some U.S. newspaper blogs were also blocked.
BOCOG is responsible for directly running the Beijing Games under the auspices of the IOC, which sets general policy.
Amnesty International has condemned Internet restrictions during the Games as “betraying the Olympic values”.

source: guardian.co.uk

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