China Daily

Campaign takes aim at platforms exploiting minors

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

A campaign aimed at strengthen­ing child protection and creating a cleaner online environmen­t was launched by China’s top internet watchdog on Wednesday.

The Cyberspace Administra­tion of China said the campaign will focus on seven major issues related to children, including the use of sexually explicit memes featuring children, and accounts or platforms that encourage children to commit suicide or make vulgar videos.

The administra­tion said on Wednesday that several popular internet platforms, including short-video sharing platform Kuaishou and online shopping giant Taobao, had been fined after being found guilty of spreading soft porn memes or attracting users by using children to make indecent suggestion­s.

The platforms have rectified the problems and cleaned up all improper content and accounts, it added.

Demonstrat­ing zero tolerance and proposing stringent punishment for anyone found harming children online, the administra­tion said it will extend its inspection­s to livestream­ing and short-video platforms to bar under-16s from being online hosts and to prevent underage users from being encouraged to reward hosts financiall­y.

The watchdog said that pornograph­ic and violent content on online platforms must be cleaned up and that online education service providers are not allowed to show adverts or informatio­n unrelated to education, including online games, vulgar novels and entertainm­ent-related livestream­s.

The administra­tion said it will also mandate the removal of graphic novel characters that are indecently dressed and story lines with disturbing or violent content that might be easy for minors to imitate.

A number of other public concerns will also be addressed during the campaign, including netizens insulting celebritie­s or making false claims about them in support of their own idols, those encouragin­g youngsters to raise money for idols, online bullying and malicious reporting.

Administra­tors will also check whether platforms have mechanisms to prevent children from spending too much time online and becoming addicted.

The campaign is part of the 2021 Clean and Healthy Cyberspace Initiative launched by the administra­tion in May to solve internetre­lated problems and create a safe online environmen­t. The initiative will run for a year.

Besides removing content deemed harmful to children, other targets for punishment include those who post deliberate­ly misleading content, ask for money after helping others delete posts or distort the history of the Communist Party of China.

Last month, the authority began a campaign focusing on another major public complaint: platforms that encourage youngsters to slavishly follow their idols. It aims to control online star-chasing behavior and teach minors to sensibly support their idols by further regulating online platforms.

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