China Daily (Hong Kong)

Livestream­ing no excuse for life-threatenin­g acts

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a male from Dalian, Northeast China’s Liaoning province, died after drinking a lot of liquor while livestream­ing. Thepaper.cn comments:

IN DECEMBER,

According to a friend of his family, he drank heavily every day for three consecutiv­e months in order to attract lots of fans. A video clip even shows he developed a nervous twitch because he drank too much.

He is not the only one of his kind. On the livestream­ing platform he served, there are still many who try to attract fans by going to extremes. The more liquor they drink, the more fans they hope to get and the more money they will make.

In other words, the business model of the livestream­ing platform encourages people to put their health and lives at risk.

That’s illegal. According to a national regulation on online performanc­es that came into effect in 2017, performanc­es on the online platforms should

not contain any horrific, cruel, violent or vulgar content, or any content that harms the performers’ health. Obviously, drinking excessive amounts of strong liquor is against the regulation.

A similar tragedy happened in 2017, when 26-year-old Wu Yongning died while livestream­ing his climb of a high building.

Some said the livestream­ers who died have chosen to do so and it is their right to make profit in this risky way. The problem is, their deeds might be emulated by others who do not know how much risk is involved.

In order to curb this behavior, it is necessary to strike at the root of the problem by regulating livestream­ing platforms. Only when the livestream­ing platforms give up the business mode of encouragin­g livestream­ers to attract fans via extreme challenges, will such tragedies be prevented in the future.

 ?? LI MIN / CHINA DAILY ??
LI MIN / CHINA DAILY

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