Company Alleges Chinese Software Has Stolen Code


Software

Solid Oak Software of Santa Barbara said Friday that parts of its filtering software, which is designed for parents, are being used in the “Green Dam-Youth Escort” filtering software that must be packaged with all computers sold in China from July 1.

Solid Oaks founder, Brian Milburn, said he plans to seek an injunction against the Chinese developer that built the software, but acknowledged that its new legal terrain for his company.

“I dont know how far you can try and reach into China and try to stop stuff like this,” he said in an interview. “Were still trying to assess what theyre doing.”

A phone number for the Chinese developer could not immediately be located. A call by The Associated Press to Chinas embassy in the U.S. after business hours Friday went unanswered.

China has mounted a vigorous public defense of the software, saying it wants it to block violence and pornography. But critics say it censors many more things, and does it on a deeper level than the Internet censorship China currently employs.

China has more than 250 million Internet users and employs some of the worlds tightest controls over what they see, often called the “Great Firewall of China,” which refers to technology designed to prevent unwanted traffic from entering or leaving a network.

Political sites and others the government deems offensive are routinely blocked, but that happens at the network level. Savvy users can get around it by bouncing through “proxy” servers in other countries, but it takes some sophistication. Blocked sites simply wont load in users Web browsers.

The new software blocks sites directly from a users machine.

A report released Thursday by University of Michigan researchers who examined the Chinese software supports Solid Oaks claim that the Green Dam software contains pirated code. The report also found serious security vulnerabilities that could allow hackers to hijack PCs running the Chinese software.

The report found that a number of the “blacklist” files that Green Dam employs were taken from Solid Oaks CyberSitter program.

Blacklists are lists of Web sites that have been flagged as violent or pornographic or malicious or otherwise offensive. Web browsers on computers where blacklists are in use are instructed to block those sites.

The reports authors – researchers in the universitys computer science and engineering division – also said they found another clue that Solid Oaks code was stolen: a file that contained a 2004 CyberSitter news bulletin that appeared to have been accidentally included in Green Dams coding.

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