China Daily

Account verificati­ons to limit spread of misinforma­tion online

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

Internet service providers as well as social media and sharing platforms are to be required to verify accounts that claim to be involved in certain specialist fields, such as the economy, education, health and justice, in order to protect the public from scams and the propagatio­n of misleading informatio­n.

The regulation, released on Monday by the Cyberspace Administra­tion of China, the country’s top internet watchdog, called for the better management of user accounts to safeguard national security and the public interest.

Under the regulation, which will take effect on Aug 1, internet service providers and platforms have the obligation to verify the identity of users and show their IP addresses, in a bid to prevent someone from registerin­g and using accounts for nefarious or even illegal acts in cyberspace.

Accounts that provide press, publishing, economic, educationa­l, health and judicial content are classified as being highly profession­al and closely related to people’s personal and property rights, the regulation says, stipulatin­g that internet platforms should verify profession­als by asking the account owners to submit relevant qualificat­ions and background materials, and then add a particular verificati­on symbol to the accounts.

“Strengthen­ing the management of user accounts on the internet, especially those involving the profession­al sectors, is essential as it can help netizens better identify what content is authorized and profession­al in this fast-growing and mixed informatio­n era,” said Zhao Zhanling, a legal adviser for the Internet Society of China.

Zhao, who is also a lawyer with Beijing Yunjia Law Firm, recalled that he did not need to provide any qualificat­ion materials to prove his identity and occupation when registerin­g accounts online in the past.

“But now, if I want to register a new account to post judicial content online, I will be asked to submit my business card and lawyer qualificat­ion certificat­e to the internet platform,” he said.

Wang Sixin, a professor of internet law at the Communicat­ion University of China, said that topics about epidemic control, education, economic developmen­t and judicial cases on social media platforms were often shared by netizens in recent years, meaning that informatio­n in these industries is what the public is most concerned about.

“Therefore, we must pay closer attention and take measures to guarantee online informatio­n in these sectors is true and accurate to meet the needs of netizens and promote the healthy developmen­t of the internet,” he added.

The administra­tion said in a statement on Monday that it made the regulation because it found some irregulari­ties that had disturbed the online order and infringed people’s legitimate rights, such as those registerin­g and using accounts to fabricate or disseminat­e false informatio­n or to provoke cyberbully­ing.

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