The Pak Banker

China summons gaming firms, to crack down on ride-hailing

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China's government on Wednesday summoned gaming firms including Tencent Holdings Ltd and NetEase Inc to ensure they implement new rules for the sector.

It also said it would crack down on illegal behaviour in the ride-hailing industry.

Beijing last month moved to ban under-18s from playing video games for more than three hours a week in a tighter set of regulation­s for gaming as it looks to strengthen control over sectors of its economy such as tech, education and property. Gaming firms were told by the government to implement measures such as curbing minors' hours of access to their video games to protect their physical and mental health, the official

Xinhua reported.

Those that are found to have "inadequate­ly" implemente­d the regulation­s will be severely punished, it said, adding that the firms present were also asked to resist engaging in improper competitio­n and should instead focus on driving innovation.

Xinhua named the authoritie­s involved as the ruling Communist Party's Publicity Department, the National Press and Publicatio­n Administra­tion, the Office of the Central Cyberspace Affairs Commission and the Ministry of Culture and Tourism.

Separately on Wednesday, the Transport Ministry said it would intensify a crackdown on illegal behaviour in the ride-hailing industry and deal with online platforms that are still using noncomplia­nt

news

agency vehicles and drivers. The statement comes after Chinese government regulators launched a cybersecur­ity probe into ride-hailing giant Didi in July.

Meanwhile, the Cyberspace Administra­tion of China said it has shut down and banned 1,793 socalled self-media accounts on online platforms since Aug. 27, when it announced a probe into the illegal release of financial informatio­n and badmouthin­g of financial markets. The term "self-media" is mostly used describe independen­tly operated accounts that produce original content but are not officially registered with the authoritie­s.

The accounts closed include three with more than a million followers, while more than 47,000 pieces of "harmful informatio­n" have been cleaned up, the administra­tion added.

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