A leaked internal document from a school in eastern China is drawing criticism after local authorities classified a student’s access to GitHub—a globally used open-source coding platform—as a “security vulnerability,” prompting sweeping disciplinary measures including device confiscation and system wipes.
The incident, which took place in Yuyao, China, is the latest example of how the Chinese regime’s tightening internet controls are increasingly impacting education, sparking concerns among analysts that ordinary academic activity is being recast as a political risk.
According to the document, titled “Report on the Handling of Computer System Security Vulnerabilities,” which was leaked on March 31, the issue dates back to Feb. 26, when a student accessed GitHub while participating in a school-organized electronics competition training session.
Despite the school noting that the platform is not blocked in China, the local Cyberspace Administration office classified the activity as a “security vulnerability.” In this case, “security” refers to the political stability of the regime instead of cybersecurity from malware.
In China, search engines, most foreign news sites, and social media platforms—including Google, Meta, and X—are blocked by censors.
On March 6, local regime authorities formally notified the school, triggering an immediate investigation and, according to the report, “rectification measures.”
The school said on March 16 that its network environment was tightly controlled, computers were connected through a centralized education network gateway, and no wireless network was deployed on campus.
Under pressure from the regime’s regulators, the school implemented a series of strict actions. These included sealing off the computers involved, wiping and reinstalling their systems, and conducting a broader sweep of campus servers and devices.
Students and staff were also explicitly prohibited from accessing overseas internet resources by any means, including the use of virtual private networks (VPNs), which are often used in China to circumvent internet censorship and access blocked sites.
The report further instructed the school to identify and disconnect any devices deemed “at risk” before reinstalling systems and upgrading security controls.
Political Control
Several China-based technology professionals and analysts said the response reflects a fundamental reinterpretation of cybersecurity. They spoke to The Epoch Times on condition of anonymity or used only their surnames out of fear of reprisal.
A Shenzhen-based network engineer told The Epoch Times that the measures are not technical risk management but are political control.
“Even briefly looking at the outside world is treated as an abomination, both for the device and for the person using it,” the engineer said.
Another expert, an online technician at a major Chinese bank, told The Epoch Times that GitHub is a core platform for developers worldwide, hosting open-source software, artificial intelligence tools, and academic resources.
“Treating access to GitHub as a security vulnerability is like treating reading an encyclopedia as a violation,” the technician said.
The technician added that the case illustrates how the regime’s authorities are increasingly overriding basic learning methods in China’s education system, potentially isolating students from the global technology ecosystem.
Feng, a U.S.-based Chinese sociologist, told The Epoch Times that the implications extend beyond a single incident. He said the report reflects a broader pattern of compliance-driven behavior in schools under regulatory pressure.
“The regime is trying to draw boundaries in students’ minds, making them wary of external sources of information,” he said.
Over time, Feng warned, such pressures could reshape the educational environment, shifting it away from exploration and toward control.
“When risk management frameworks are applied to learning itself, the space for curiosity and independent inquiry shrinks,” he said.
Wang Xin contributed to this report.






















