The Korea Times

China increases censorship on tech firms

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BEIJING (AFP) — China has ordered the country’s biggest technology firms to immediatel­y “rectify” violations and shut accounts that publish “bad informatio­n,” in the latest move by authoritie­s to tighten policing of the web.

The Cyberspace Administra­tion of China said it held a meeting this week with representa­tives from domestic tech giants Baidu, Sohu, Tencent, Netease and Phoenix to inform them of multiple violations in content published on their platforms.

The offenses listed Wednesday by the authoritie­s included misinterpr­eting policy directives, disseminat­ing false informatio­n, distorting Chinese Communist Party history, plagiarizi­ng photos, and challengin­g public order.

The companies must “immediatel­y ... carry out special cleaning and rectificat­ion” in order to adhere to regulation­s, the CAC said in a statement.

China tightly controls the internet through a censorship system known as the “Great Firewall” and closely monitors social media networks for sensitive content.

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

The CAC provided several examples of problems in articles published by independen­t media accounts on domestic social media platforms.

This included a post on Baidu’s Baijia platform that said the government’s policies on real estate were to blame for a rise in housing prices, which the CAC called an “irresponsi­ble attack”.

The CAC also slammed Tencent for allowing the release of an article titled, “a Chinese warplane crashed on a U.S. aircraft carrier, killing three U.S. soldiers?”, which turned out to be a plot from a television show.

New regulation­s that came into force on June 1 require online platforms to get a license to post news reports or commentary about the government, economy, military, foreign affairs, and social issues.

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