AsiaPREMIUM

Hong Kong internet domain approver can now reject any sites under security law

Holders of .hk domains have just been advised of the policy change that may see applications for new sites rejected under an ‘acceptable use’ rule

Police crack down on protesters at a march against the national security law at the anniversary of Hong Kong’s handover to China from Britain in Hong Kong on July 1 2020. Picture: REUTERS/TYRONE SIU
Police crack down on protesters at a march against the national security law at the anniversary of Hong Kong’s handover to China from Britain in Hong Kong on July 1 2020. Picture: REUTERS/TYRONE SIU

Hong Kong — The company which approves internet domains in Hong Kong said it will now reject any sites that could incite “illegal acts”, raising new concerns about freedoms after Beijing’s imposition of a national security law on the Chinese-ruled city in 2020.

Holders of .hk domains were advised of the policy change late on Thursday, sources said, hours after internet service provider Hong Kong Broadband Network (HKBN) said it had blocked access to HKChronicles, a website offering information about anti-government protests.

The moves came just days after the arrest of more than 50 pro-democracy activists, and sources have said that China is planning a further crackdown.

HKBN said it had blocked the website, which also publishes personal information on Hong Kong police officers, in compliance with the national security law, the first such censorship in the city of its kind.

Anti-government protests in 2019 relied heavily on social media channels, such as Telegram, which allowed protesters to organise anonymously. Many sites also sprang up in support of the protest movement, though a number shut after the passage of the security law.

In the e-mails, the Hong Kong Domain Name Registration (HKDNR) alerted holders of .hk domains to the new “acceptable use” policy by its parent, Hong Kong internet Registration Corporation (HKIRC), which goes into effect on January 28, according to copies shared by recipients with Reuters.

It said it could reject applications for new .hk sites that it believes could incite criminal acts, abuse privacy or provide false or misleading information.

It was not immediately clear whether the policy will apply to existing .hk websites. The HKIRC, the HKDNR and the Hong Kong government did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

“The rollout of the acceptable use policy is quite worrying,” said one website operator who declined to be identified, citing fear of repercussions. “Things like providing false or misleading information, who are they to decide? Are these preventive measures for future false news regulations?”

The moves are fueling worries that a censorship mechanism similar to China’s “Great Firewall” is being put in place in Hong Kong.

While the internet in mainland China is heavily censored and access to many foreign platforms such as news sites is blocked, residents in Hong Kong have so far enjoyed greater freedoms under the “one country, two systems” framework that it was promised when Britain handed it back to China in 1997.

China Mobile and PCCW, the other major internet providers in Hong Kong, did not respond to requests for comment.

Wong Ho Wah, who is running for Hong Kong’s legislature to representing the IT sector, said he is deeply worried that Hong Kongers’ freedom to access information on the internet is starting to be affected.

“The government has the responsibility to explain the justification and the rationale of the action,” he said, referring to the blocking of the HKChronicles website. 

Reuters

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