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China vows stricter controls on social media

Trucker

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BEIJING/SHANGHAI - China will intensify controls of online social media and instant messaging tools, the ruling Communist Party said in an agenda-setting document that marks the government's highest-level reaction so far to the explosive growth of microblogs.

Beijing's vow to strengthen Internet administration and promote content acceptable to the ruling party appeared in the communique of a recent party leadership conclave published in the official People's Daily on Wednesday.

Communiques from the Communist Party's Central Committee, which held its annual meeting this month, set the broad agenda for policy-makers. This one made clear that party leaders are looking for ways to better control, but not snuff out, the microblog services that have become popular channels for spreading news and opinion that can unsettle the government.

"Strengthen guidance and administration of social Internet services and instant communications tools, and regulate the orderly dissemination of information," said the communique, which made no reference to microblogs as such.

"Apply the law to sternly punish the dissemination of harmful information," added the document. It did not give details of what form firmer regulation may take.

The announcement from the Party meeting builds on a stream of warnings in state media that has exposed how nervous Beijing is about the booming microblogs, called "weibo" in Chinese, and their potential to tear at the seams of censorship and controls.

But analysts said the business impact was likely to be muted, because investors are used to growing official scrutiny of Chinese Internet companies and the government is unlikely to shut down what has become an important valve for monitoring and easing social pressures.

"There will be tighter censorship, but the impact on the platforms won't be much. I don't think the government will implement nation-wide regulations because that will be negative for the government and the companies," said Hong Kong-based CLSA analyst Elinor Leung.

Criticizing officials, reporting unrest and abuses

Chinese microblogs, especially Sina Corp's dominant service, carry plenty of gossip and harmless fare. But they also offer raucous forums for lambasting officials and reporting unrest or official abuses. It is their potential to stoke popular discontent that most worries Beijing.

Microblogs allow users to issue bursts of opinion -- a maximum of 140 Chinese characters -- that can cascade through chains of followers who instantly receive messages, challenging censors who have a hard time monitoring the tens of millions of messages sent every day. Inventive users adopt alternative words to get around censorship filters.

A bullet train crash in Wenzhou this July was a watershed moment for Sina's "Weibo" microblog service as thousands of users expressed anger at the official response and pulled apart official accounts of the crash and rescue response.

More recently, an uproar spread on Sina's Weibo when a two-year old girl who was run over by two trucks and then ignored by passerbys as she lay bleeding. She later died.

The number of Chinese users registered on domestic microblog sites reached 195 million by the end of June, a more than threefold increase on the number at the end of 2010, according to the China Internet Network Information Center.

A top Chinese Internet regulator this month also called for stricter policing of microblogs while encouraging officials to use them to engage with citizens, indicating that Beijing was looking to better control such services, but not shut them down.

Sina and other Chinese microblog operators already deploy technicians and software to monitor content and block and remove comment deemed unacceptable, especially about protests, official scandals and party leaders.

Excessive self-censorship on the microblog platforms risks alienating off users by making them bland, analysts said.

"The more important risk we see for Sina Weibo and other Weibos is that they self-regulate out of business (interests)...and that they self-neuter and that makes the platform so boring no one wants to use it," said Michael Clendenin, the managing director of RedTech Advisors.

China vows stricter controls on social media | ABS-CBN News | Latest Philippine Headlines, Breaking News, Video, Analysis, Features
 
there is a thing called " the dumbing down of the masses".. this does not mean they are dumb but rather its keeping them away from controversial exchanges makes them too guarded. This is why the chinese are overtly hostile and sensitive to any criticism . decades of dumbing down has made them not only intolerant of others ( see race related attitudes prevalent), but makes them all bunch up and be overtly protective of big brother.

I just don't get why a country thinks so little of their citizens psyche and ability to consume news of all kind ...

you know what would be great?- it would great for a chinese him/herself to tell us, why they need to be protected from blogs and news sources.
 
^ because they are all fake anti-china propaganda. the only things these propaganda affect most are indians.

but i understand why indians always get so worked up. because china kicked your butt in 1962 and we will gladly do it again. and cowering behind your anglo master's won't help you either, because we intend to replace them then you will be licking chinese boots for a long long time. :whistle:
 
China is controlling over the online false rumors and propaganda, not the media blackout like the western media did on the Occupy Wall Street movement.
 
China is controlling over the online false rumors and propaganda, not the media blackout like the western media did on the Occupy Wall Street movement.
The fact that you can say this with a straight face tells us all we need to know of you -- a sheeple.
 
Am pretty sure that this very forum is banned in China. :woot:
 
^ because they are all fake anti-china propaganda. the only things these propaganda affect most are indians.

but i understand why indians always get so worked up. because china kicked your butt in 1962 and we will gladly do it again. and cowering behind your anglo master's won't help you either, because we intend to replace them then you will be licking chinese boots for a long long time. :whistle:


dude the day is not far when you will have take your gov permission before you piss.....you might call this also a western conspiracy ....:D
 
dude the day is not far when you will have take your gov permission before you piss.....you might call this also a western conspiracy ....:D
And these sheeple will see nothing wrong with it.
 
Ohh..commonn...the government should be trying to eaze the controls...facebook is already non-existant ( i dont remember if its banned).....
china has the largest number of people in the world....the probability of meeting a chinese on an internet chat is the least!!
Its so sad that we hardly get to interact with chinese people!!
 
^ because they are all fake anti-china propaganda. the only things these propaganda affect most are indians.

but i understand why indians always get so worked up. because china kicked your butt in 1962 and we will gladly do it again. and cowering behind your anglo master's won't help you either, because we intend to replace them then you will be licking chinese boots for a long long time. :whistle:

why is it that you have to repeat 1962 , butt, chinese boot, and whites in every other thread. Read up a dictionary and improve your vocabulary..if that's whats hindering u from talking sense..thanks
 
^ because they are all fake anti-china propaganda. the only things these propaganda affect most are indians.

but i understand why indians always get so worked up. because china kicked your butt in 1962 and we will gladly do it again. and cowering behind your anglo master's won't help you either, because we intend to replace them then you will be licking chinese boots for a long long time. :whistle:

Of course you did :). But what you didn't know was that Nehru was making India shyt at that time :D and that kick on our Butt left a stench on your leg. That is why the world community looks at you with disgust. However later, Indira took us to water. But your leaders forgot to take you guys to toilet paper. Or maybe they did. Just that it didn't work the magic of water. :rofl: :rofl:
 

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