HANOI, Vietnam — Google Inc. says new Internet regulations in Vietnam  raise disturbing concerns that the government may be working to block  access to websites and track user activity.
An entry posted  Thursday on Google's online public policy blog said new regulations  passed in April require that all retail Internet locations in the  capital of Hanoi must install special software on their server computers  by 2011.
"The implementation of an application like this one  would choke off access to information for many in Hanoi — given how  popular Internet cafes are among Internet users in Vietnam," Google  policy analyst Dorothy Chou wrote in the blog. "If the regulation  spreads beyond Hanoi, it will impose these vague and non-transparent  restrictions on users all over the country."
It is not clear what  type of software would be installed, but the blog linked to an English  translation of the regulations posted by Viet Tan, a pro-democracy group  with members inside Vietnam and abroad.
It said the computers  must have government-approved "Internet Retailers Management Software"  installed on them.
The regulations apply to all Internet retailers  and businesses providing Web service, such as hotels and Internet  cafes, it said.
The Vietnamese government considers Viet Tan a  terrorist group, but the U.S. has said there is no evidence to support  that allegation.
Vietnamese officials in Hanoi did not immediately  respond to questions about the regulations on Friday. The Communist  government does not tolerate any form of dissent or challenge to its  one-party rule. Dozens of dissidents have been jailed for using the  Internet to promote democracy.
In March, Google said the computers  of "potentially tens of thousands" of Vietnamese users had been  infected by malicious software that spied on them and also launched  Internet attacks on sites criticizing a government-backed bauxite mining  project to be built by a Chinese company in Vietnam's Central  Highlands. The project has generated heated debate among some Vietnamese  who fear it will create environmental problems or lead to Chinese  workers flooding into the strategically sensitive region.
The  government has intermittently blocked Facebook since late last year, and  other social networking sites also have been shut down, including one  devoted to the bauxite issue.
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