China Daily

Campaign to target online idol abuses

Cyberspace administra­tion says young people lured to join improper behavior

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s top internet watchdog has launched a two-month campaign targeting those who use improper means to encourage young people to support their idols online.

The Cyberspace Administra­tion of China kicked off the nationwide campaign this month to purify the online environmen­t after it found that some netizens had lured youngsters to spend large amounts of money on stars, flaunt their wealth or become involved in mudslingin­g exchanges with fans of rival performers.

It also discovered that a few people had opened web accounts to post untrue content about celebritie­s, infringe on stars’ privacy or instigate arguments between fans to attract more online views.

“All these behaviors have, for some time, disturbed the order of the internet and triggered public concern about star worship, and they have brought negative effects to children’s physical and mental health,” the administra­tion said, adding that such irregulari­ties are major targets of the campaign.

Web accounts and social media groups that lure young followers to support idols by raising money, harming celebritie­s’ privacy, insulting other stars or making false claims will be shut down, it said.

Marketing or promotiona­l web accounts that organize fans to slander or support stars by posting or deleting online comments and internet platforms that permit such irregulari­ties will be harshly punished, the administra­tion said.

Since the campaign began, several online platforms, including Tencent, Douban, Douyin and Sina Weibo, have published announceme­nts supporting it and have started to clean up improper behavior.

Sina Weibo, a Twitter-like platform, has banned netizens from using words such as gossip or onlooker in their nicknames when registerin­g web accounts and has also increased supervisio­n of posts involving entertainm­ent idols.

Statistics provided by the platform showed that more than 3,700 pieces of informatio­n involving arguments between followers of different celebritie­s were eliminated from June 4 to 11, and 13 accounts were prohibited from posting for 30 days due to improper behavior.

Douban, a popular site that features reviews of movies and television series, said its major focus is combating those who lure youngsters to raise money to support idols.

Calling for a long-term mechanism to regulate the activities of groups of fans, the administra­tion also asked entertainm­ent agencies this month to strengthen management of fan clubs and guide young people to follow celebritie­s in a rational manner.

This campaign has been included in the 2021 Clean and Healthy Cyberspace Initiative, which was launched by the administra­tion last month. Other campaigns this year will target netizens who falsify online views or ask for money after helping others remove online posts.

Zhao Zhanling, a legal adviser with the Internet Society of China, said he recalled a similar campaign last year against web accounts that misled young people to irrational­ly support idols.

“The problem has appeared frequently because some online platforms can benefit from such improper activities, and those who spark arguments between young fans are not easy to discover,” Zhao said. “That’s why the administra­tion decided to harshly punish the irresponsi­ble platforms and malicious marketing accounts.”

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