The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Beijing probes social media platforms for ‘obscenity’

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BEIJING: China has launched probes into three of its largest social networking platforms over the suspected disseminat­ion of violence and obscenity — the latest move aimed at sanitising the country’s increasing­ly closed-off internet.

The world’s most popular messaging service WeChat, the Twitter-like Weibo as well as the Tieba discussion forum are being investigat­ed, according to an announceme­nt from the Cyberspace Administra­tion of China yesterday.

Citing reports from internet users, the administra­tion said other users on WeChat, Weibo and Tieba’s platforms ‘have disseminat­ed content showing violence, terrorism, fake rumours, obscene pornograph­y and more’.

Such materials ‘endanger national security, public security and the social order’ and are illegal under a cybersecur­ity law that came into force in June, the agency said.

China’s Internet is already considered one of the most tightly-controlled in the world, with a censorship system known as the ‘Great Firewall’.

But restrictiv­e measures have multiplied in recent months, as celebrity gossip blogs and online video streaming sites alike have fallen victim to the new web regulation­s.

Last month, the Cyberspace Administra­tion directed the country’s biggest technology firms — including Baidu, Tencent and Sohu — to shut down accounts on their networks that publish ‘bad informatio­n’.

The content was deemed to misinterpr­et policy directives and distort Chinese Communist Party history.

Another mandate in the new cybersecur­ity law requires online platforms to get a licence to post news reports or commentary about the government, economy, military, foreign affairs and social issues.

There has also been increasing concern among internet users that they will completely lose access to virtual private networks (VPN), software which allows people to circumvent the Great Firewall.

In January, China’s Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology (MIIT) announced it would be banning the use of unlicensed VPN providers.

While there has been little clarity on what exactly the rule meant and how, or even if, it would be implemente­d, Apple said last month that it was removing VPNs from its China app store. — AFP

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