The Sun (Malaysia)

Weibo to combat ‘bad behaviour’

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BEIJING: Weibo, China’s equivalent of Twitter, told users yesterday it would start to publish their IP locations on their account pages and when they post comments, in a bid to combat “bad behaviour” online.

The move, posted on Weibo’s official account, garnered over 200 million views and was widely discussed, with some users rattled by the perceived reduction in their online anonymity.

“Every IP address seems to be whispering in your ear: ‘You be careful,’” wrote user Misty.

However, others said they were supportive of the measures, in light of Covid-related misinforma­tion.

“Especially at a time when the Covid situation is still serious, IP being swiftly revealed can effectivel­y reduce the appearance of disgusting content from rumour makers and spreaders,” wrote user UltraScarr­y.

Weibo, which has over 570 million monthly active users, said users’ IP addresses would be displayed under new settings which came into effect yesterday and cannot be turned off by users.

For users in China, the platform will display the province or municipali­ty where they are posting from, it said.

For those using Weibo overseas, the country of users’ IP addresses will be displayed.

The settings are designed to “reduce bad behaviour such as impersonat­ing parties involved in hot topic issues, malicious disinforma­tion and traffic scraping, and to ensure the authentici­ty and transparen­cy of the content disseminat­ed,” Weibo said in a notice.

The effects of the new rules were already visible underneath the notice, as thousands of user comments all carried an extra label indicating the province or municipali­ty of the user’s IP address.

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