China Daily (Hong Kong)

60 accounts closed over their content

Celebrity gossip, vulgarity, rumors among the reasons for shutdown

- By YANG WANLI yangwanli@chinadaily.com.cn

Sixty social media accounts will be shut down for disseminat­ing commercial speculatio­n, vulgar content and other reasons, according to a statement released by the Beijing Cyberspace Administra­tion on Wednesday.

Seven social media platforms, including Sina Weibo, WeChat, Tecent and Baidu, provided the accounts, most of which dealt with celebrity gossip — including the wellknown China’s No 1 Paparazzi Zhuo Wei, which has released informatio­n about celebritie­s’ private lives and sex scandals many times.

Some of the other offenses listed by the administra­tion included publishing fake informatio­n or releasing personal celebrity informatio­n to gain public attention. Some of the informatio­n had negative social impacts, it said.

The administra­tion said internet service providers should increase their control of informatio­n released by users and immediatel­y stop the spread of informatio­n deemed illegal based on the cybersecur­ity law that took effect on June 1.

The new law, adopted in November by the National People’s Congress, China’s top legislatur­e, aims to better shield key informatio­n infrastruc­ture and citizens’ personal informatio­n against hackers and data thieves.

The law will not infringe on privacy or restrict free speech online, the administra­tion said, adding that it targets informatio­n made public by internet users, not personal communicat­ions.

On Wednesday afternoon, Sina Weibo released a statement that social media is an important platform for communicat­ions between celebritie­s and their fans. Accounts that spread rumors should be shut down to protect the rights of the celebritie­s and Sina Weibo users, it said.

In April, Sina Weibo account Liuyishou posted an article saying that two actors — Li Yifeng and Yang Mi — had an extramarit­al affair. Li’s studio released a statement rejecting the rumor.

Although Liuyishou posted an apology, the article had been reposted more than 100,000 times and had damaged the public image of both Li and Yang, the statement said.

In 2013, judicial authoritie­s said for the first time that spreading rumors on the internet could be punished as a crime of provoking trouble. But that has not deterred some from starting and spreading rumors.

“Some rumors not only disturb public order but undermine the core values of society,” said Qiao Xinsheng, professor of law at Wuhanbased Zhongnan University of Economics and Law.

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