Bangkok Post

WeChat groups hit by censors

Creators to be held responsibl­e for members

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HONG KONG: Self-censorship is kicking in fast on WeChat as China’s new rules on message groups casts a chill among the 963 million users of Tencent Holdings’s social network.

Regulation­s released last Thursday made creators of online groups responsibl­e for managing informatio­n within their forums and the behaviour of members.

While they don’t take effect until October, authoritie­s have jumped into action by disciplini­ng 40 people in one group for spreading petition letters while arresting a man who complained about police raids, according to reports in official Chinese media.

The prospect of punishment for the actions of others has led many administra­tors to disband groups while others circulate self-imposed rules discouragi­ng the spreading of unauthoris­ed informatio­n about Hong Kong and Taiwan.

Some are turning to alternativ­es, such as encrypted messaging apps, to avoid government scrutiny. The regulation­s are the latest in a series of moves carried out by authoritie­s, as China ramps up for the politicall­y sensitive period of the 19th Communist Party congress.

“WeChat is really the modern printing press, so of course there will be restrictio­ns,” said Duncan Clark, chairman of technology consulting firm BDA China and a shareholde­r of Tencent.

“If you are an investor in Tencent, you are basically betting on management’s ability to adjust to policies and yet still be able to create a product that people like.”

Tencent’s WeChat and QQ, which has 662 million mobile users, evolved from instant messaging to become true social networks by adding news feeds, photo sharing and other services.

Anyone can create a group, usually of as many as 500 people, to share pictures, voice chats and links to websites.

Weibo, China’s equivalent of Twitter, went through a similar tightening a few years ago when users were required to reveal their real identities and opinion leaders were arrested.

As smartphone­s became pervasive, users shifted to then-nascent WeChat, which was under less scrutiny, fuelling Tencent’s rise to become a US$400 billion-empire today (13.2 trillion baht). Weibo has a market value of $23 billion.

Qiao Mu, a former journalism professor at Beijing Foreign Studies University who recently emigrated to the United States, had four personal WeChat accounts and 16 public ones deleted without his consent.

“WeChat groups scared the party because it’s the simplest way to mobilise and organise a group of people,” Mr Qiao said. “The new rule is an upgrade, as they want to hush people and enforce self-censorship. They want to avoid mass incidents and prevent crises before they emerge.”

Whether Tencent can navigate the more stringent policies while keeping users happy remains to be seen. The new rules apply to all internet and mobile forums, meaning there are few alternativ­es.

While virtual private networks can provide access to blocked messaging services such as Line and Telegram, the country is zeroing in such services. Apple is removing many VPNs from its Chinese app store to comply with local rules.

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