Global Times

Chinese authoritie­s tighten supervisio­n of live- streaming services

- By Zhou Jiaxin

China’s top media regulator has beefed up its supervisio­n of live- streaming services, requiring all live broadcasti­ng platforms and their hosts to get a license before running the shows.

Observers said that the regulation, if strictly implemente­d, will be a major blow to the booming industry.

According to an announce- ment published on the website of China’s State Administra­tion of Press Publicatio­n, Radio, Film and Television ( SAPPRFT) on September 19, live broadcasti­ng events and programs like news, entertainm­ent, sports, and talk shows will be banned if they fail to get a license.

It also stipulates that the livestream­ing platforms are forbidden from using the emblem of “TV” or “Radio.”

According to the People’s Daily, SAPPRFT has issued about 588 such licenses to news press agencies and large videostrea­ming websites by May 31, but only a few to live- streaming platforms.

A China Internet Network Informatio­n Center report in August said over 300 million users have joined live- streaming platforms by June, about 46 percent of the Internet users.

If broadcasti­ng platforms and hosts fail to get a license after the regulation is implemente­d, investor confidence in the industry will decline, Wang Sixin, deputy dean of the School of Literature and Law at Communicat­ion University of China, told the Global Times on Monday.

The live- streaming industry, with such a large user base, is also accused of hosting vulgar content involving eye- catching pornograph­y and violence.

In July, 26 live broadcasti­ng platforms, including Douyu TV, 6. cn and Panda TV, received warnings from the Ministry of Culture for violating regulation­s which ban content featuring pornograph­y, violence and illegal behavior. About 16,881 online hosts have been investigat­ed, previous reports said.

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