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- It's believed that human error caused a glitch in the country's firewall, sending people to a company that sells anti-censorship technology to Chinese citizens. January 22, 2014 6:11 AM PST Well, isn't this one ironic? China's formidable Great Firewall, which blocks access to all sorts of Web services and believed threats to the country's people, was the victim of a glitch on Wednesday that saw hundreds of millions of Chinese Web users attempting to access allowed sites being redirected to the homepage of Dynamic Internet Technology (DIT), a company that sells technology allowing Chinese citizens to get around the firewall. Although state-run media outlets have said that the glitch was in fact a successful hack, people familiar with the matter told Reuters on Wednesday that no hacking attempts were identified, making those sources wonder if simple human error caused the issue when modifications were made to the firewall. The hole gave many Chinese citizens their first glimpse into the outside digital world. For years, China has been blocking Web sites, including DIT's, for a myriad reasons, including alleged threats to its government structure and a desire to limit comments on certain topics. Official reports out of China say an investigation is ongoing into the matter. It's believed that China's Domain Name Service erroneously directed users who were trying to access sites without the ".cn" domain to the DIT Web site. According to Reuters, the DIT site was seeing 1 million page requests per second at the height of the glitch.
It's believed that human error caused a glitch in the country's firewall, sending people to a company that sells anti-censorship technology to Chinese citizens. January 22, 2014 6:11 AM PST Well, isn't this one ironic? China's formidable Great Firewall, which blocks access to all sorts of Web services and believed threats to the country's people, was the victim of a glitch on Wednesday that saw hundreds of millions of Chinese Web users attempting to access allowed sites being redirected to the homepage of Dynamic Internet Technology (DIT), a company that sells technology allowing Chinese citizens to get around the firewall. Although state-run media outlets have said that the glitch was in fact a successful hack, people familiar with the matter told Reuters on Wednesday that no hacking attempts were identified, making those sources wonder if simple human error caused the issue when modifications were made to the firewall. The hole gave many Chinese citizens their first glimpse into the outside digital world. For years, China has been blocking Web sites, including DIT's, for a myriad reasons, including alleged threats to its government structure and a desire to limit comments on certain topics. Official reports out of China say an investigation is ongoing into the matter. It's believed that China's Domain Name Service erroneously directed users who were trying to access sites without the ".cn" domain to the DIT Web site. According to Reuters, the DIT site was seeing 1 million page requests per second at the height of the glitch.
It's believed that human error caused a glitch in the country's firewall, sending people to a company that sells anti-censorship technology to Chinese citizens.
Well, isn't this one ironic?
China's formidable Great Firewall, which blocks access to all sorts of Web services and believed threats to the country's people, was the victim of a glitch on Wednesday that saw hundreds of millions of Chinese Web users attempting to access allowed sites being redirected to the homepage of Dynamic Internet Technology (DIT), a company that sells technology allowing Chinese citizens to get around the firewall.
Although state-run media outlets have said that the glitch was in fact a successful hack, people familiar with the matter told Reuters on Wednesday that no hacking attempts were identified, making those sources wonder if simple human error caused the issue when modifications were made to the firewall.
The hole gave many Chinese citizens their first glimpse into the outside digital world. For years, China has been blocking Web sites, including DIT's, for a myriad reasons, including alleged threats to its government structure and a desire to limit comments on certain topics.
Official reports out of China say an investigation is ongoing into the matter. It's believed that China's Domain Name Service erroneously directed users who were trying to access sites without the ".cn" domain to the DIT Web site. According to Reuters, the DIT site was seeing 1 million page requests per second at the height of the glitch.