The Manila Times

China fines tech firms over online content

- AFP

BEIJING: the country’s biggest technology online content as the authoritie­s intensify their policing of the internet.

Three web giants operating popular social media services have received “maximum penalties” for allowing the publicatio­n of pornograph­ic, violent and other sorts of banned material, the Cyberspace Administra­tion of China said.

Internet users had shared the content on Baidu’s online forum Tieba, the microblogg­ing site Weibo, and Tencent’s WeChat applicatio­n, according to the watchdog.

The companies also failed to block content that “promoted ethnic hatred,” it said in a statement on Monday.

not made public. The companies were also ordered to immediatel­y remove illegal content as well as increase platform management measures.

A Baidu spokeswoma­n told AFP the company is “actively cooperatin­g with the government” to “purge bad informatio­n” from its Tieba forum.

Regulation­s in force since 2000 say websites are responsibl­e for ensuring the legality of any informatio­n posted on their platforms.

China has tightened online policing this year, enacting new rules that require tech companies to store user data inside the country as well as restrictio­ns on what is permissibl­e content.

The fines were handed down ahead of the Communist Party congress on October 18, when President Xi Jinping is expected to the party’s general secretary.

In the past few days, Chinese authoritie­s appear to have severely disrupted Facebook’s WhatsApp messaging app.

China usually steps up surveillan­ce around major events.

Foreign websites such as Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest and a slew of overseas media have been blocked for years.

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