The Borneo Post

China says investigat­ing Baidu, Tencent, Weibo for breaching cyber laws

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BEIJING: China’s cyber regulator yesterday said it was investigat­ing the country’s top social media sites over failing to comply with strict laws that ban content which is violent, obscene or deemed offensive to the Communist Party.

The Cyberspace Administra­tion said it was investigat­ing Tencent Holdings Group Ltd’s WeChat, Weibo Corp and Baidu Inc’s forum site Tieba over suspected violations of the country’s strict cybersecur­ity laws.

“Us er s are spreading violence, terror, false rumours, pornograph­y and other hazards to national security, public safety, social order,” the regulator said on its website.

The companies did not immediatel­y respond to emails and phone calls seeking comment on the probe.

This is the latest in a series of regulatory actions against the country’s top tech firms as China’s cyber authoritie­s adopt an increasing­ly hardened stance on censorship, doling out harsh punishment­s to firms that fail to comply.

Last month, cyber authoritie­s called on the same firms to carry out immediate “cleaning and rectificat­ion” at a meeting with their representa­tives, where the authoritie­s cited specific examples of illicit content, including rumours about party officials and misreprese­nting Chinese military history.

Prior to the meeting, Weibo was ordered to partially close its video site over violations, wiping out a combined US$1.3 billion worth of stock between Weibo and parent firm Sina Corp.

Messaging app WeChat and microblogg­ing service Weibo are China’s most popular social media platforms, and have thrived due to the absence of western competitor­s like Facebook and Twitter that are banned by the country’s censors.

WeChat and Weibo have about 940 mi l lion and 350 million monthly active users, respective­ly. — Reuters

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