● 09.05.11

●● Cablegate: After Visit to Bill Gates, Chinese Government Signs Microsoft Cooperation Deal

Posted in Asia, Bill Gates, Cablegate, Microsoft at 8:49 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Summary: How Microsoft is “enabling tyranny” in China with yet another deal that helps show mockery of the Chinese

LAST night we discovered some important facts about Microsoft helping Tunisia spy on citizens, more of less in the same way that Russian dissent was crushed with help from Microsoft. This is an appalling display of proprietary software in action. The news about Tunisia is actually based on a diplomatic leak which now receives a lot of extensive coverage. Well, our own post and the other one which we cited got many links/references to them and even the ‘press’ covered the issue after this had been revealed. See for example the article “Microsoft aided former Tunisian regime” as it says:

Microsoft helping Tunisia spy on citizens
Russian dissent was crushed with help from Microsoft
↺ “Microsoft aided former Tunisian regime”
According to a cable sent by the US embassy in Tunis on 22 September, 2006, Microsoft was so keen to get the Tunisian government to drop its policy favouring open-source software that it agreed to set up a “program on cyber criminality” to cover training. The deal also entailed the company giving the Tunisian regime, headed by President Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali, the original source code for Microsoft software.The cable was made public last week by Wikileaks as part of a massive and largely accidental publication of unredacted US embassy messages. In it, embassy officials told Washington there was a risk the training could be used to further oppress the Tunisian people.“Through a program on cyber criminality, Microsoft will train government officials in the Ministries of Justice and Interior on how to use computers and the internet to fight crime. As part of this program, Microsoft will provide the GOT [Government of Tunisia] with original source codes for its program,” the cable read. “In theory, increasing GOT law enforcement capability through IT training is positive, but given heavy-handed GOT interference in the internet, Post questions whether this will expand GOT capacity to monitor its own citizens,” it continued.

This leads us to today’s Cablegate cable, which shows how Microsoft bashes the intelligence and the education of the Chinese. China’s relationship with Bill Gates is a subject that we wrote about many times in the past, even several years ago. Watch his role in the following deal:

several years ago

>

VZCZCXRO5403

RR RUEHCN RUEHGH

DE RUEHGZ #5379/01 1440829

ZNR UUUUU ZZH

R 240829Z MAY 06

FM AMCONSUL GUANGZHOU

TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 8706

INFO RUEHOO/CHINA POSTS COLLECTIVE

RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC

RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC

RUEKJCS/DIA WASHDC

RHHMUNA/HQ USPACOM HONOLULU HI

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 GUANGZHOU 015379

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A

TAGS: ECON, ETRD, EINV, EDUC, TNGD, CH

SUBJECT: Microsoft Opens Technology Center in Guangzhou

(U) This document is sensitive but unclassified. Please

protect accordingly.

1. (SBU) Summary: Following on the heels of President Hu

Jintao's meeting with Bill Gates in Seattle, Microsoft

unveiled its first technology center in South China. The

center is the result of an agreement between Microsoft and

the Chinese government to set up at least 10 such centers

throughout China. The center will develop software for e-

governance, entertainment, and information systems security

as well as provide training and consulting services to local

government offices and enterprises. The facility will

eventually employ between 300 and 500 software engineers,

though staff said they will be lucky to find 100 qualified

candidates by the end of 2006. End summary.

Microsoft Makes a Deal

----------------------

2. (SBU) Timothy Chen, corporate vice president and CEO of

the Greater China region, was the ranking Microsoft

representative at the ceremony on May 15. In an aside to

Consul General, Chen said he served as the interpreter

during President Hu Jintao's April 2006 visit to Bill Gates'

Seattle home. The opening ceremony of the Guangzhou

Technology Center was reportedly postponed until Hu returned

from his visit to Seattle.

3. (U) In his remarks, Chen said Microsoft and the Chinese

government signed their first MOU in June 2002. Since then,

Microsoft has provided training support to more than 30,000

Chinese students and professionals free of charge. In

addition, Microsoft has outsourced USD 5.5 million worth of

software products to Chinese partners. Microsoft and the

Chinese government signed their second MOU on Apr. 18, 2006

during Hu's visit to Seattle. Under this agreement,

Microsoft will establish more than 10 technology centers in

key cities in China to promote the advancement of

information technology through cooperation with local

software developers.

And Now to Fill the Buildings...

--------------------------------

4. (SBU) Microsoft's Guangdong research center is the first

such center for Microsoft in South China, and others are

planned for Shenzhen and Xiamen. The center is located in

Gaotang Software Park, on the fringes of the city in the

fast-developing Tianhe District. It occupies two mid-size

buildings that are connected by an elevated pedestrian

walkway and surrounded by grassy fields -- a miniature

version of the Seattle campus. According to company

literature, the center's long-term goal is to employ between

300 and 500 software engineers. However, Microsoft

representatives said informally that they would be lucky to

find 100 qualified employees by the end of 2006 because of

the dearth of well trained, experienced professionals in the

field.

5. (U) According to company literature, the center will

provide services in software design, development, and

support in the areas of e-governance, information security,

and digital entertainment. It will also provide training

and consulting services for government agencies and

enterprises, with the aim of developing Guangzhou's software

industry.

Big Plans for Guangzhou's Software Industry

-------------------------------------------

6. (U) Guangzhou Vice Mayor Shen Bonian noted in his remarks

that Guangzhou is experiencing a shortage of high-tech

talent, but said the city's 11th Five-Year Plan calls for

more than 200,000 software technicians by 2010. He said the

Microsoft technology center will help nurture this much-

needed talent and also assist in the informatization of

Guangzhou government offices and enterprises. Guangzhou's

software industry is expected to generate more than 100

billion RMB (USD 12.5 billion) in income by 2010, with an

annual increase of 35 percent. In comparison, software

companies in Gaotang Software Park generated 10.5 billion

RMB (USD 1.3 billion) of revenue from software sales in

2005.

Comment: A Political Necessity Hobbled by Educational

Deficiencies

--------------------------------------------- --------

GUANGZHOU 00015379 002 OF 002

7. (SBU) This technology center, being the result of

negotiations between Microsoft and the Chinese government,

may serve Guangzhou's interests more than Microsoft's,

though Microsoft sees the centers as being a political

necessity for its future in China. Though software

localization and customer service are important for

Microsoft's regional operations, the employment, training,

and consulting services that this center will provide are a

boon to Guangzhou's high-tech industry. The remarks by

Microsoft staff that the center's job openings will be

difficult to fill reflect the deficit of well-trained,

experienced professionals in Guangzhou's high-tech industry.

Other contacts in the high-tech field have complained to us

that young Chinese software developers have sufficient

technical ability, but lack the talent to innovate -- owing

in part to outdated teaching methods in China's

universities.

DONG

A year ago Microsoft was accused in the US senate of “enabling tyranny” in China [1, 2]. █

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