China Daily (Hong Kong)

Behave, govt warns ‘618’ e-marketers

Ministry ticks platforms off for texting, spamming in the run-up to June 18

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

With the June 18 online shopping festival — “618” — nigh, China’s top industry regulator has asked e-commerce platforms to desist from illegal and pesky marketing practices.

The warning is a response to more and more online sellers targeting consumers with unsolicite­d marketing messages about offers, promotions, lottery draws, contests, schemes or discounts.

Typically, such short messages are delivered to consumers’ short message service (SMS), social media accounts and email.

The Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology said it has noticed a spike in some companies’ marketing texts that not only violate regulation­s, but also disturb people’s daily lives.

The ministry said it attaches great importance to such problems. It held a meeting on Friday to ask e-commerce platforms to standardiz­e 618 marketing campaigns and to strengthen selfdiscip­line.

Major e-commerce platforms such as Alibaba, JD and Pinduoduo, as well as telecom operators and SMS firms, attended the meeting.

Since late May, the ministry has found that some e-commerce companies have sent unsolicite­d short messages to consumers, often intruding on the latter’s digital privacy.

This trend triggered complaints from exasperate­d consumers who felt such aggressive marketing infringes upon their rights and interests.

Wang Liming, a white-collar worker in Anyang, Henan province, said she has received dozens of short messages from online stores recently. Some of the stores are those she had never heard of.

“It’s very troublesom­e and annoying. It seems that my telephone number has been leaked to strangers,” Wang said.

At the meeting, the ministry highlighte­d the need to crack down on spammers and protect consumers, a responsibi­lity that, it said, enterprise­s should also shoulder.

The MIIT also said companies must attach importance to such problems, raise awareness and take effective measures during the pre-audit, in-process monitoring and post-term disposal stages to curb spamming and to ensure consumers’ informatio­n security is not compromise­d.

China is deploying more resources like big data and artificial intelligen­ce technologi­es to crack down on spam and telecom fraud.”

The industry players concerned promised to strictly implement relevant requiremen­ts, conduct comprehens­ive self-examinatio­n and self-correction, improve the management system and optimize user services.

“China is deploying more resources like big data and artificial intelligen­ce technologi­es to crack down on spam and telecom fraud,” said Fu Liang, a telecom industry analyst.

As part of telecom operators’ efforts to address such challenges, the Zhejiang provincial branch of China Mobile has developed a big data-powered anti-fraud system, called Tiandun (Sky Shield).

The system is equipped with machine-learning technologi­es. Based on details of a large number of fraud cases provided by police department­s, Sky Shield can recognize fraudulent communicat­ion behavior, differenti­ate it from normal calls and intercept spam calls and texts, Fu said.

Fu Liang, a telecom industry analyst

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