● 12.28.11

●● Cablegate: US Government Talks About Providing Free Software that Helps Chinese Netizens Overcome Filters

Posted in America, Free/Libre Software at 6:58 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Summary: A look at Free software in China based on cables that Wikileaks released about a year ago to selected journalists

According to the following Cablegate cable, “if the USG [US government] provided free software that helped Chinese netizens overcome filters, this might politicize the issue of Internet freedom and force the PRC government to react.”

It is interesting in the context that, in another Cablegate cable, it says that “China’s 11th Five-Year Plan (2006-2011) calls for the development of embedded software [and] open source software,” so here are the two cables in full:

↺ Cablegate

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TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 7730

INFO RUEHOO/CHINA POSTS COLLECTIVE IMMEDIATE

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RHEHNSC/NSC WASHDC IMMEDIATE

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 05 BEIJING 000183

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DEPT FOR S, P, D, EAP/CM, EEB, AND H

NSC FOR BADER, MEDEIROS, AND LOI

E.O. 12958: DECL: 01/23/2030

TAGS: PREL [External Political Relations], PGOV [Internal Governmental Affairs], ECON [Economic Conditions], PHUM [Human Rights], EINV [Foreign Investments], CH [China (Mainland)]

SUBJECT: SECRETARY'S INTERNET FREEDOM SPEECH: CHINA REACTION

Classified By: DCM Robert Goldberg fo Reasons: 1.4(B), (D).

Summary

-------

¶1. (C) Secretary Clinton's January 21 speech on Internet

Freedom touched a nerve in China. Official reaction was

negative, with harsh criticism coming from the Ministry of

Foreign Affairs in an official statement and from other parts

of the Chinese system through critical articles and

editorials in the official press. Chinese Internet censors

were deployed in force to block online commentary and

coverage of the Secretary's speech, and as of January 24,

sites in the United States that carried transcripts of the

speech were inaccessible without VPN or other

firewall-evading software. The few Chinese netizens and

bloggers who did manage to access the speech and then dared

write about it were generally supportive of the Secretary's

message. Other Embassy contacts, including academic

USA-watchers and journalists, lamented that the Secretary's

speech would strengthen and embolden those in the Chinese

system who advocated greater control over the Internet in

China. They expressed concern that Internet freedom would be

made into an "us vs. them" issue rather than a "right vs.

wrong" issue. Contacts warned that Chinese officials see

U.S. efforts to promote Internet freedom as an attack,

repeatedly invoking the specter of "color revolution." Some

contacts in the tech industry praised the speech as being

"spot on" in its coverage of U.S. firms' difficulty with the

Chinese business environment. Contacts outside Beijing were

cautious with their comments. Embassy and consulate officers

will continue to follow the reaction to the Secretary's

remarks in the weeks ahead to assess their continuing impact

on government, think tank, media, blogger and business

actions with regard to the Internet. End Summary.

Official Reaction Negative

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

¶2. (C) In a January 22 statement in reaction to the

Secretary's Internet freedom speech, Chinese Ministry of

Foreign Affairs spokesperson Ma Zhaoxu, said "we firmly

oppose such words and deeds, which are against the facts and

harmful to U.S.-China relations." Ma's remarks followed a

January 21 press conference by Vice Foreign Minister He

Yafei's in which he did not refer to the Secretary's speech,

but urged the United States to refrain from

"over-interpreting" the Google case, saying it should not be

allowed to impact bilateral relations. Ma's statement was

much more negative than initial unofficial comment from

working-level MFA officers the morning of January 22. Asked

about the speech, MFA North American and Oceanian Affairs

Department U.S.A. Division Director An Gang told poloff that

the MFA noticed that specific Chinese cases or individuals

were not mentioned in the speech, and that "we are very happy

about that." (Comment: the contrast between the "softer"

comments from the USA desk and the harder language from the

Spokesman several hours later suggests that the negative

reaction to the speech originated at higher levels in the

foreign policy hierarchy.)

Media Reaction Dutifully Echoes MFA Criticism

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

¶3. (SBU) Chinese media coverage of the Secretary's speech

widely quoted the MFA statement. January 22 coverage

included assertions that the Secretary's call for

unrestricted access to the Internet could be regarded "as a

disguised attempt to impose U.S. values in the name of

democracy." Articles in the nationalist daily Global Times

stated that the bulk of Internet comment originated in the

West, "loaded with aggressive rhetoric against other

countries," against which other countries cannot hope to

defend. Beijing University Professor of Communications Hu

Yong, quoted in the 21st Century Business Herald, said the

Secretary's discussion of sharing technology to allow users

to circumvent Internet censorship meant that the "Google

incident is only the beginning of a rolling snowball."

¶4. (SBU) Most regional reporting in China emphasized that

Internet freedom has now become embedded as a new diplomatic

tool the U.S. foreign policy. Shanghai's influential Wenhui

Daily ran a January 23 commentary calling Secretary Clinton's

remarks "arrogant, illogical, and full of political shows and

calculations," accusing her of having a "Cold War mentality."

Some Chinese outlets rebutted U.S. charges by praising

Chinese Internet practices. January 22 televised news

programming reported on the benefits for Chinese users of

Chinese governmental supervision of the Internet. Shanghai

TV January 22 broadcast programming which painted Chinese

online police in a positive light.

BEIJING 00000183 002 OF 005

Blogger Community: Those that Saw it, Liked it

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

¶5. (SBU) Chinese netizens accessed the Secretary's speech and

shared reactions through rough real-time translations on

Twitter, blogs, and Google. The range of opinions among the

self-selecting demographic of Chinese netizens, who had

circumvented Chinese government blocks to blog and

participate in Twitter-based discussions, ranged from

supportive to skeptical, with the majority expressing

agreement with the principles outlined in the Secretary's

speech. In general, Chinese netizen comments focused on

speculation about linkages between the Secretary's speech and

Google's announcement that it was considering withdrawing

from China.

¶6. (SBU) Many netizen reactions echoed the statements by

blogger Lian Yue who tweeted that Secretary Clinton's speech

"clarified the relation between Internet freedom and business

prosperity, which gave better guidance for American companies

operating in China." A Chinese blogger named Zhou Shugang

wrote that the speech was "certain to have a positive effect

and was welcomed by Chinese Internet users regarding the

censorship problem in China." Others commented that the

speech was an indication that the United States was leading

the U.S.-China relationship in the right direction.

¶7. (SBU) Some Chinese bloggers viewed the Secretary's speech

as "confrontational," but nonetheless inspiring to the

Chinese people.

- Chengcheng, a cartoonist-blogger, depicted Secretary

Clinton as Joan of Arc, with a widely distributed graphic of

"Hillary leads the people." Another Chinese Twitter user

wrote, "What a historic speech( it is the launching of an

Internet war, the confrontation between democracy and

authoritarianism becoming public, and the beginning of a new

Cold War."

- Wen Yunchao, a blogger based in Guangzhou, similarly

characterized the speech as "a declaration of war from a free

nation to an autocracy. It might be as important as

Churchill's Iron Curtain Speech... I will wait with hope. The

direct mention of China also calls for a frank and honest

discussion between Hu Jintao and Wen Jiabao."

-Gadfly artist and blogger Ai Weiwei, attending a Mission

sponsored event in Beijing (see para 21), said the

Secretary's speech "showed the power of the Internet to the

world" and raised the U.S. Internet strategy to a new level.

¶8. (SBU) Some bloggers expressed skepticism.

- Novelist and blogger Yang Hengjun tweeted, "the U.S.

government has been talking about supporting world-wide

Internet freedom for ages, but it hasn't done much yet."

- Rao Jin, the founder of anti-CNN.com, a website critical of

western media reporting, doubted the sincerity of the United

States' commitment to the freedoms mentioned in Secretary

Clinton's speech due to competing commercial and national

security interests.

Chinese bloggers, regardless of their outlook, have widely

reported that Chinese web monitors have been aggressively

deleting posts and content related to the Secretary's speech.

China Watchers: Speech Will Provoke the Authorities

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

¶9. (C) Other contacts analyzed the Secretary's speech the way

bloggers did, but were pessimistic about the effect of the

speech on Chinese authorities. On January 22 Chen Jieren

(protect), nephew of Politburo Standing Committee member He

Guoqiang and editor of a Communist Youth League website, told

poloff that following the controversy generated by Google's

announcement, the issue of Internet freedom had been

discussed several times within the Politburo Standing

Committee which had agreed that the issue of Internet freedom

had supplanted traditional human rights issues as a new

"battleground" between the United States and China. Although

he was not aware of any specific Standing Committee

decisions, Chen said that President Hu Jintao had provided

general guidance that the issue should not be allowed to

cause major disruptions to U.S.-China relations.

¶10. (C) On January 21, speaking before the Secretary's

speech, Yang Jisheng, Deputy Editor of the reform-oriented

political digest Yanhuang Qunqiu, told poloff that the

Communist Party viewed Internet freedom initiatives as a

direct challenge to its ability to maintain social and

political stability and, therefore, its legitimacy. He said

that, in this context, the Party would resist international

pressure on the Google issue and would increase restrictions

on the Internet in the period leading up to the 18th Party

Congress in 2012. He predicted that the Secretary's speech

BEIJING 00000183 003 OF 005

would be viewed as directed at the Communist Party and would

therefore generate uncertainty about U.S. intentions towards

China.

¶11. (C) On January 23, a prominent Tsinghua University media

and public opinion researcher pointed out that most Chinese

media reactions to the Secretary's speech had simply

republished the MFA statement and were not printing any

quotations from the speech itself. Given the political

sensitivity of the speech and the Google case, this was the

only safe thing to do, he said. Any perceived support for

the Secretary's speech in the press would "cross a red line"

with censors. The researcher said the Chinese public had

mixed feelings about the speech and the Google issue. While

many in China were dissatisfied with Internet censorship,

they also resented public criticism from U.S. officials, he

said, predicting that the speech would increase nationalist

sentiment in China. Another contact, a journalist at a

Communist Youth League magazine, agreed that while it might

cause a nationalist response, the Secretary's message "needed

to be said." He predicted that the Chinese government would

attempt to appeal to nationalism to counter the Secretary's

speech. However, he noted that most current media commentary

critical of the speech, and Google, was not being written by

well known journalists, intellectuals or scholars whose

silence could be read as a show of support for the speech -

and for Google.

¶12. (C) Beijing University School of International Studies

Assistant Professor Yu Wanli, one of Beijing University's

better-known U.S.A. experts, told poloff January 23 that he

had been "disappointed and depressed" when he read the

Secretary's speech. "Those who tried to control the Internet

more in China never had much support before," he said. "Most

people believe information should be open, and the Internet

should be open. The conservative, security people were the

minority and many people just laughed at them." The

Secretary's speech, however, gave great new energy to the

"controllers" who could now plausibly argue that the United

States was explicitly using the Internet as a tool for regime

change. "The Internet belongs to every country," he

complained; "we all can go there, we all can add to it, we

all can learn from it. We Chinese were free there. Now the

United States has claimed it for itself and so it will become

an ideological battlefield." He asserted that, in the past,

the Chinese authorities had paid relatively little attention

to controlling the Internet, focusing only on the issues that

were the most urgent and letting most netizens alone. "That

is finished now. The Secretary's 'information curtain'

remark will give the authorities what they need to

'harmonize' the Internet for all Chinese citizens."

(Comment: 'harmonize' is an acidly sarcastic term in Chinese

to describe official deletion or blockage of Internet

content. Yu is nearly always laid back and even-tempered.

His commentary on this issue was more emotional and bitter

than poloff has seen from him in dozens of encounters over

three years, even on extremely sensitive issues such as the

Xinjiang riots or the demonstrations abroad against the

Olympic torch relay in early 2008.)

¶13. (C) Yuan Peng, Director of the Institute of American

Studies at the Ministry of State Security-affiliated China

Institutes of Contemporary International Relations (CICIR),

warned that Google's announcement had become a new irritant

to the bilateral relationship with the potential to be even

more dangerous than the Taiwan and Tibet issue. Yuan said

that many Chinese citizens believed that Google's decision

was part of a coordinated public/private effort by the USG to

impose U.S. values on China, what he referred to as an

"E-color revolution." As confirmation of this theory, Yuan

cited Secretary Clinton's January 7 "21st Century Statecraft"

dinner with several tech sector CEOs (including Google),

Google's donations to President Obama's presidential

campaign, and Secretary Clinton's January 21 speech on

Internet freedom.

¶14. (C) CICIR researcher Guo Yongjun warned that there were

people in China and other countries such as Iran who might

see the "shadow of color revolution" in recent USG policies

promoting Internet freedom and 21st century e-diplomacy. For

example, Iranians might perceive Washington's new initiatives

on Internet freedom or the advocacy of new technologies such

as Twitter to be "aggressive" or harboring ulterior motives,

such as promoting regime change, said Guo. Informed Chinese

netizens already know how to circumvent the Great Firewall to

access Facebook and Twitter, Guo said, including by using

commercially available software. He feared, however, that if

the USG provided free software that helped Chinese netizens

overcome filters, this might politicize the issue of Internet

freedom and force the PRC government to react. One possible

BEIJING 00000183 004 OF 005

consequence, warned Guo, was that China might make it illegal

to download either U.S.-provided or commercially available

software that helped Internet surfers circumvent the Great

Firewall.

¶15. (C) Professor Xu Jianguo of Beijing University's National

School of Development said January 22 that restricting the

Internet access of Chinese netizens would theoretically

hamper development of cutting edge industries, but was

skeptical this had happened in reality. Professor Wu

Bingbing, also of Beijing University, said in the same

meeting that the problem was that China's leaders did not yet

feel comfortable with these new communications technologies

and thus preferred to proceed cautiously. The Google issue

and Secretary Clinton's speech were likely to prompt them to

shift from a low-profile to a higher-profile response on

Internet freedom.

IT Industry: Speech Accurately Portrayed Business Environment

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

¶16. (C) The president of a strategic international trade

consulting business in Beijing and chair of AmCham's working

group on export controls, called the Secretary's speech "spot

on, "directly capturing industry concerns about a business

climate that is getting worse on a "day-to-day basis." He

applauded the Secretary's speech as a means of bringing the

Chinese to the table to address key concerns about the

business environment and said the decision taken by Google

was of enormous magnitude, indicating the depth of concern

over issues it is facing here. As a result, he believes, the

Chinese government's failure to respond to its people's

opposition to censorship would embolden the netizen community

in its efforts to evade government controls.

¶17. (C) Another high-tech industry consultant expressed

concern that the Secretary's speech would dampen the

U.S.-China business climate and drive it "to a new low." The

consultant observed that "China has noticed that the NSA and

the Pentagon have dominated cyberspace policy for over a

year." Key officials, academics, and military leaders,

according to this consultant, hold paranoid fears that the

U.S. would one day launch a "zero-day" attack on all of

China's critical infrastructure. The Secretary's speech and

Google's recent actions, would amplify this belief.

¶18. (C) Reaction in northern China, where Intel has a

multi-billion dollar manufacturing factory investment under

construction, however, has thus far been limited. Intel's

Dalian-based General Manager told Congen Shenyang poloff that

the Secretary's speech had thus far not created a stir.

Intel's GM had in the past several days met with several

Dalian Vice Mayors, and reported Google and Internet freedom

issues had not been raised.

¶19. (C) South China-based Internet portal contacts were

reluctant to talk with ConGenoffs about ongoing media

coverage of Google or broader internet freedom issues. A

public relations manager from Netease initially refused to

comment, saying it was not appropriate for her to offer an

opinion on policy matters, but then guardedly reverted to

official-sounding comments about why Internet regulation is

important for the well-being of Chinese users and the

maintenance of a positive online environment.

¶20. (C) A working-level official from the Guangzhou Municipal

Informatization (sic) Office went further in sharing

pro-government comments with ConGenoff, saying that Google is

a business and should restrict itself to business matters,

rather than venturing into political territory. The official

said 2009 was a very strong year for internet companies in

China and that internet restrictions had not dampened

individual user's online experiences or companies' earnings.

Mission Outreach on the Secretary's Speech

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

¶21. (C) January 22, Embassy Beijing and Consulates General

Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenyang hosted a simultaneous

digital video conference viewing of the Secretary's speech

for dozens of local bloggers, with an additional 300 netizens

attending via the Internet. Mission estimates indicate

Twitter communications and blog entries will reach a combined

audience of millions of persons. Following the speech,

participating bloggers, who were generally supportive of the

Secretary's message, engaged in a lively discussion focused

on what specific measures the United States government could

take to promote Internet freedom in China and whether the

speech constituted a new direction for U.S. foreign policy on

BEIJING 00000183 005 OF 005

China.

HUNTSMAN

And the second cable:

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RUEHGV/USMISSION GENEVA 0445

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UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 GUANGZHOU 000562

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STATE FOR EAP/CM, EA/CIP, AND EB/CBA

STATE PASS USTR FOR STRATFORD, WINTER

USDOC FOR 4420/ITA/MAC/MCQUEEN

E.O. 12958: N/A

TAGS: ECON [Economic Conditions], ETRD [Foreign Trade], EINT [Economic and Commercial Internet], TSPL [Science and Technology Policy], CH [China (Mainland)]

SUBJECT: Guangzhou's Software Industry: Perspectives from a

Software Park and a Software College

¶1. (U) Summary: The development of Guangdong Province's software

industry has been a key priority in recent years for China's

Ministries of Commerce, Information Industry, and Education, among

others. Guangzhou has emerged as a focal point for the

establishment of the province's leading software parks and schools

of software engineering. Tianhe Software Park, Guangzhou's first

and largest, boasts 1,203 enterprises and was recently designated by

the Ministry of Science and Technology as a "Software Industry

Export and Innovation Base" with a mandate to boost China's

participation in the international software export and out-sourcing

markets. The South China University of Technology School of

Software Engineering ranks 15th out of China's 36 software schools,

and is one of only two such schools in Guangdong. Both the Software

Park and the SCUT Software School maintain extensive ties to leading

Chinese companies as well as multinational companies. End Summary.

Overview of the Software Industry in China

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

¶2. (U) According to Zhan Yanzun, Vice President of the China

Software Industry Base, Administrative Commission of Guangzhou,

Tianhe Software Park, the value of the domestic Chinese software

market is between RMB 100 billion to 150 billion (USD 13 - 19.5

billion) per year. Currently, Beijing, Guangdong, and Shanghai are

the top three locations in the country in terms of the size of the

software industry. China's 11th Five-Year Plan (2006-2011) calls

for the development of embedded software, open source software, and

middleware which are key focal points for Guangdong. Zhan also

noted China's interest in pursuing overseas markets. The National

Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) and the Ministry of

Commerce (MOFCOM) encourage domestic software companies to compete

in the international marketplace. The Ministry of Science and

Technology (MOST) and MOFCOM have both recently sent delegations to

North America on market exploration trips. According to Zhan, the

delegation's biggest target market is North America, followed by

Europe, and then Southeast Asia. In the North American market,

Chinese government officials hope to set up representative offices

in San Francisco and New Jersey; they will be responsible for

collecting market information and carrying out marketing functions.

The Making of Guangzhou's Top Software Park

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

¶3. (U) Guangzhou Municipality boasts four software parks: the

Guangzhou Software Park, the Guangzhou Tianhe Software Park, the

Nansha District Software Park and the Huanghuagang Information Park.

The Tianhe Software Park is the largest of the four in terms of

size (it is the largest among all 11 national-level software parks

in China, with a planned area of 12.25 square kilometers) and output

(70 percent of software output in Guangzhou). Established in 1991,

it is also the oldest of the four. In the last 16 years, Tianhe

Software Park has been named "National Hi-tech Zone" by the National

Commission of Science and Technology (or MOST), a "Software Industry

Export and Innovation Base" and "National Industry Base for Online

Games" by the NDRC and the Ministry of Information Industry (MII).

The Tianhe Software Park has 19 branch parks.

¶4. (U) By the end of 2006, according to Qiao Xizhong, Director of

Service Industries at Tianhe Software Park, there were 1,203

enterprises (290 were foreign-invested and the rest were domestic,

largely Guangdong local enterprises) in Tianhe Software Park,

employing about 50,000 persons, with a total annual output of RMB

25.3 billion (USD 3.3 billion). Forty percent of the park's output

came from the telecom and value-added services, 25 percent from

financial services and the remainder from office automation (OA) and

business intelligence (BI).

-- The top three domestic enterprises in the park are Netease, which

had revenues of RMB 2.6 billion (USD 338 million) in 2006,

Digitalchina and Sinobest.

-- Other key enterprises, which have an annual output above RMB 120

million (USD 15.6 million), include ChinaWeal, Excellence, Asinfo,

Chuangxiang, and Keyou.

-- The top three foreign-invested enterprises are Ericsson from

Sweden, and two Hong Kong enterprises.

-- Other key foreign-invested enterprises include Trans Cosmos from

Japan and the RIB Group from Germany, both of which are engaged in

software outsourcing.

GUANGZHOU 00000562 002 OF 003

¶5. (U) Projects currently underway in the Park include:

-- the Internet Digital Center (IDC), which will house more than

3,000 servers.

-- the Southern R&D Center of China Mobile, which will cost RMB 1.7

billion (USD 221 million) in the first phase with a 490,000 square

meter work area,

-- a four-star hotel and apartment buildings for foreign staff,

namely project managers and technicians from countries such as

India, the United States, Germany, Japan, and Holland.

A road is also being built and this will cut travel time to ten

minutes between the software park and the Eastern Railway Station by

the end of this year.

Encouraging the Growth of the Software Park and Industry

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

¶6. (U) Software Park Vice President Zhan noted that MOFCOM granted

the title "Software Exports and Innovation Base" to Guangzhou,

Nanjing, Hangzhou, Jinan and Chengdu in December 2006 to boost

China's participation in the international software market,

especially in software exports and outsourcing. Zhan said 35

enterprises in the park are engaged in software outsourcing, and

that all are members of the park's Software Outsourcing

Association.

¶7. (U) The Guangzhou Municipal Government released "No. 44 document"

in 2006 to attract investors to the software industry. Incentives

offered to enterprises to settle in the park include house rental

subsidies, post-doctoral study subsidies, and income tax

preferential policies for top management members.

Software Park Officials address IPR issues

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

¶8. (U) Zhan said that IPR protection has been a focus of both the

Guangzhou and Tianhe District governments alike. He also noted that

the Tianhe Software Park is a member of the Guangzhou IPR Protection

Team, which is headed by Vice Mayor Wang Xiaoling. The Software

Park is involved in drafting and implementing the team's action

plans on IPR protection.

The Human Resources Component of the Park

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

¶9. (U) Zhan said Guangzhou's goal is to have 200,000 professionals

in the software and cartoon/animation industries by 2010. Zhan

believed that there is a current shortage of high-end software

professionals in Guangzhou. Enterprises in the park recruit both

new graduates and experienced workers, but company-specific training

is provided to both before they begin work. Most enterprises

conduct training on their own, but Zhan said that enterprises will

likely utilize on on-site training center after completion.

Enterprises in the park last year recruited roughly 1,200 college

gradates from across China, with most coming from Guangdong.

According to Zhan, Sun Yat-sen University and the South China

University of Technology (SCUT) have excellent software schools so

they do not need to look far to recruit qualified graduates.

South China University of Technology

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

¶10. (U) South China University of Technology (SCUT) was established

in 1952. In 2003, SCUT ranked the 20th among the 570 universities

in China. SCUT has been named a key university of China by the

Ministry of Education. The university is famous for engineering and

has 29 schools, 67 undergraduate programs, 177 master programs, and

75 doctoral programs. SCUT has a state key laboratory, two national

engineering research centers, one "National Class A" architecture

design and research institute, and four key labs certified by the

Ministry of Education. In 2005, SCUT professors published 2,326

papers in academic journals; in 2006, SCUT applied for and received

207 patents. In 2006, SCUT won more than USD 43 million in funding

from the central and provincial governments.

The Software Engineering College at SCUT

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

¶11. (U) China currently has 36 software engineering schools. The

software school at SCUT was established in 2001 by MOE and the

GUANGZHOU 00000562 003 OF 003

Economy Development Planning Committee; it ranks 15th in China. It

has been named one of the "National Pilot Schools for Software

Engineering". The school includes master's programs for computer

software, theory, and software engineering, and also has an

undergraduate program in software engineering. In 2006, the school

carried out 44 research projects and received RMB 7.78 million (USD

1 million) in government funding. The school was awarded five

patents and registered 18 types of IPR in software. According to

Deng Huifang, dean of the software school, MOE periodically

evaluates the schools' academic and research achievements and

decides if they measure up to established criteria. At present,

Guangdong Province has only two national pilot schools of software

engineering, the other one at Sun Yat-Sen University. With the

pilot school designation, SCUT can charge high tuition fees, which

are about 60 percent higher than other schools.

¶12. (U) SCUT's School of Software Engineering currently has 30

full-time teachers and 46 part-time teachers. Fifteen of the

teachers are from foreign countries. Of the school's 1,475 students

are 1,132 undergraduate and 343 postgraduates. Most of the students

are from Guangdong Province, the ratio of male students to female

students is 6:1. Each year, the school graduates 300 with bachelor

degrees and 200 with a master's degree. Most of the graduates

currently work in IT-related fields. More than 70 per cent of the

graduates are working in private enterprises, and about two percent

are self employed. About 96 percent of SCUT graduates found

employment rate in 2005 and 2006.

Collaborating with Foreign Companies and Institutions

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

¶13. (U) The School of Software Engineering of SCUT cooperates

extensively with multinational IT companies such as IBM China Ltd.,

Microsoft Asia Research Center, HP China Ltd., Intel China Ltd.,

Oracle Beijing, BEA, CISCO, and SUN. The school currently has an

IBM mainframe education center, a Linux education training center,

eight labs which work jointly with the companies, three student

innovation studios and one student industrial practice center.

Companies like IBM and Microsoft not only provide funding and

equipment to the research centers, but also work with the centers to

design courses for the students. To keep up with the development of

international software, the school also incorporates courses from

universities like North West University from U.S., York University

from U.K., SAP from Germany, and IIT from India.

Guangdong's Software Exports

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

¶14. (U) According to Deng, Guangdong's exports of software products

amounted to USD 1.9 billion in 2005, or 50 percent of the country's

total software industry exports, which stood at USD 3.8 billion.

Shenzhen, Guangzhou and Zhuhai are the top three cities in the

province in terms of software exports. The major overseas markets

for Guangdong are Hong Kong, Japan, Southeast Asia, Taiwan, Europe,

and the U.S. Guangdong currently has 1,181 software companies.

Guangdong has 14 of the top 100 software companies of China; six are

headquartered in Guangzhou, seven in Shenzhen, and one in Zhuhai.

These companies include Guangzhou GaoKe Communications Technology

Co., Ltd., Sinobest, Guangzhou Haige Communications Industry Group

Co. Ltd., and Guangzhou Ziguang North America Science and Technology

Ltd.

GOLDBERG

That’s all from China for now. █

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