China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Government moves to clean up internet content Social networking and streaming sites are coming under greater scrutiny and regulation, as Zhang Yi reports from Beijing with Liu Kun in Wuhan.

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The government is working to eradicate inappropri­ate content on the internet to ensure that the web remains free from obscenity and violent imagery, and to promote a healthy culture online.

Last month, the Cyberspace Administra­tion of China, the national cyberspace regulator, ordered online news aggregator Toutiao and Kuaishou, a site that shares videos lasting about 60 seconds, to remove obscene and violent content and to close all accounts that uploaded such content.

The administra­tion also closed about 5,000 livestream­ing accounts hosted by minors — people younger than 18 — and deleted about 300,000 video clips aired by livestream­ing youngsters.

The move was aimed at closing loopholes in the operation of some online services, which have been criticized for attracting viewers without regard for rules or morality.

Recently, Kuaishou and Huoshan, a short-video applicatio­n affiliated to Toutiao, have been widely criticized for allowing minors to spread “harmful” content.

Videos of pregnant teenagers or teenage mothers — usually unmarried and ages 13 to 18 — appeared on the sites, describing their pregnancie­s or their lives as young mothers, and were forwarded to other sites in an effort to gain traffic and followers. That’s despite the fact that sexual activity with people ages 14 or younger is defined as rape in China, while the legal age for female marriage is 20. Moreover, being a single mother does not accord with traditiona­l values.

Senior executives at both companies pledged to close all livestream­ing accounts hosted by minors within five days, intensify regulation of content and alter the values used to set the algorithms that decide which content should be promoted to users.

Growing audience

By the end of last year, there were 579 million online video viewers and 422 million livestream­ing viewers in the country, according to the China Internet Network Informatio­n Center.

Meanwhile, according to a recent report from iiMedia Research Group, a mobile internet consultanc­y, short videos are becoming increasing­ly popular, with 242 million viewers by the end of last year, a year-on-year rise of more than 58 percent.

Viewers’ reasons for watching the videos vary: more than 70 percent use them to kill time and relax, while approximat­ely 42 percent said they also used them to obtain informatio­n, and about 21 percent were looking to make friends, according to the report.

“Cyberspace is not a lawless place because an online exchange is also a social relationsh­ip that must abide by the law and regulation­s,” said Sun Jin, head of the Cyberspace Governance Research Institute at Wuhan University.

“We appeal to people to adopt higher ethical standards, but they must adhere to the law. Those disseminat­ing videos of adolescent mothers are suspected of abetting illegal conduct and promoting bad influences on society,” he said.

Moreover, users who upload “harmful” videos must assume joint responsibi­lity with the sites that provide platforms that help to spread them, he added.

Yuan Gang, deputy CEO of livestream­ing site Douyu, said there are rules governing the registrati­on of minors on the site.

“We use facial identifica­tion methods for account registrati­on and users must provide their ID cards. If they are under 18, they are not allowed to open an account. However, they are allowed to do so if they have written permission from their guardian. If the minors want to livestream, their guardian should aware of it,” he said.

Self-censorship

In response to the authoritie­s’ moves to straighten out irregulari­ties in content, livestream­ing and video sites have vowed to remove harmful content and increase manpower in content review.

Zhang Yiming, CEO of Toutiao, posted an apology the same night as one of its apps was ordered to close permanentl­y after airing illegal content. He said he had “spent a sleepless night, feeling guilty and blaming himself” for failing to live up to the trust and support of the site’s users.

“We have focused on scale, but have not improved quality of content in a timely manner, and we have neglected our social responsibi­lity to guide users toward positive informatio­n,” he said.

“We put a lot of energy and resources into growing our enterprise, but we did not take enough measures to regulate the platform, including effective governance of vulgar, violent, harmful content and false advertisin­g.”

Zhang said the company overemphas­ized the role of technology without realizing that it must be guided by the correct values.

Shortly before Zhang’s apology, Su Hua, CEO of Kuaishou, expressed regret and apologized for the presence of illegal content — such as pornograph­y and footage of violent acts — on his site.

He conceded that “the algorithm used by the platform contains certain values because humans are responsibl­e for programmin­g them.

“Technology itself is neutral, but the loophole stems from the wrong values behind the algorithms programmed by humans,” said Zhang Xiaoqiang, a professor of journalism at Chongqing University.

Technicall­y, the term “algorithm” refers to a set of instructio­ns followed in a fixed pattern. They are mainly used for solving math problems and making computer programs.

“The apps have their own algorithms, which decide the content they push to users based on data and their own methods of calculatio­n,” Zhang Xiaoqiang said.

“Different video sites have different algorithms, and some are based on users’ personal habits. For example, on Douyin, a video site attached to Toutiao, viewers will be offered videos similar to those they have already viewed.

“Some have algorithms that create ‘hot’ items. For example, when a video reaches a certain number of views, the platform will push it to all users, send it to the front page or label it as hot,” he said.

“As a result, more people will view it, making it an extremely popular product. However, that popularity is man-made. That way we often encounter items that are seen as popular online, but we feel unaffected after watching them.”

He added that in an informatio­n-overloaded world, algorithms are essential tools.

“They are like dippers that extract what we need from the sea of informatio­n and put it in front of us. It is easy for vulgar things to become popular because poorly educated netizens find them easy to understand,” he said.

“IT engineers at companies

Chen Rui, an associate professor at the Institute of Communicat­ion Psychology at Communicat­ion University of China, said, “The severe authority order last month was a blow to the industry. It signaled that service providers should be self-discipline­d and improve their initiative in content review.

“These sites should improve their editorial processes and raise the qualificat­ions for editors. The algorithm engineers need extra training as well, especially in terms of communicat­ion ethics.”

Zhang Xiaoqiang said sites must ensure that the people posting on them are aware of the regulation­s that govern online content.

We are in an era of displaying individual­ity, and younger people are eager to show their personalit­ies.

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