Click here to read more
about press freedom conditions in CHINA
New
York, October 3, 2000 --- The Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ) is dismayed by the raft of Internet regulations announced this
week by the Chinese government, which include new rules holding companies
that do business online responsible for any material that party officials
might consider "subversive."
The rules, published yesterday by the state news agency, Xinhua, are
part of a set of telecommunications regulations passed by China's
cabinet two weeks ago. They represent China's most systematic effort
to date to control the Internet.
"Internet content providers that conduct news,
publishing, or electronic bulletin board services must record the
information content they provide, and the times they publish it,"
according to the text of the rules as reported by the Reuters news
agency. Internet service providers, meanwhile, are now expected to
"record the times users log on to the Internet, users' account numbers,
Internet addresses or domain names, and the phone numbers users dial
in from."
The regulations seem designed to shift the burden of policing the
Internet from the government to Web site operators and Internet service
providers, requiring them to keep detailed records of content and
user identities for 60 days, and to turn these records over to police
on demand.
"The Chinese government is determined to control news published on
the Internet," said CPJ executive director Ann Cooper. "Officials
have a limited ability to monitor the vast sea of information available
online, so they've simply appointed the companies involved in e-commerce
as their proxy policemen."
Under the new regulations, "illegal content" includes news and information
that is harmful to China's reputation, disrupts social stability,
or threatens the country's efforts at reunification with Taiwan. The
regulations also prohibit the posting of any material "advocating
cults and superstition"--a move that would, among other things, curb
the spread of news about the banned Falun Gong spiritual movement.
Web site operators that fail to report sensitive content to the authorities
risk closure, giving them a powerful incentive to censor such material.
Because traditional media are severely restricted in China, the Internet
has been an important tool for circulating independent news and information.
END