"Democracies must say no to the technologies, platforms, standards, and frameworks shrewdly proposed by China in various international fora and technical or standards bodies in order to make our Internet more like the one in China. Internet governance must be kept open and participatory for all stakeholders, not just governments. Research into and the development of privacy-preserving and anti-censorship technologies must be supported. A vision for a free and open global Internet must be integrated into future foreign policy formulation, not only because it should be, but also because China has already begun to integrate its own contrary vision." (Executive summary)
1 Introduction, 8
2 China's Internet Governance: Censorship and Repression, 10
3 The Growing Legal and Technical Toolbox, 13
4 The Stakeholders, 21
5 Weaponizing Data in China, 28
6 China's Everywhere Firewall: Transnationalization of Digital Authoritarianism, 34
7 A Call for a Competitive-Minded Response, 48