China clamps down on video sites

State will control all content

Written by Iain Thomson

The Chinese government is to ban video sharing sites such as YouTube unless they are state controlled and display only licensed content.

All sites offering video content will have to be licensed from 31 January and controlled by the state, according to new regulations from the State Administration of Radio, Film, and Television.

"Those applying for internet audio-visual service [licences] must at the same time be solely state-owned enterprises or enterprises whose shares are controlled by the state," the notice said.

"Those who provide internet video services should insist on serving the people, serving socialism and abiding by the moral code of socialism."

The regulations are an attempt to clamp down on the use of such sites to display media that is not controlled.

The move will cause consternation among Western companies such as Google, which owns YouTube, that have cooperated with the authorities on censoring internet information.

This is not the first time that the Chinese have taken sweeping steps in censorship. In 2005 Wikipedia was blocked for over a year and even now some information on the site remains unavailable.

Governments around the world are growing increasingly concerned at the activities of Western companies in aiding censorship, particularly in China.

The Chinese state employs thousands of people as web censors, and companies such as Cisco, Microsoft, Google and Yahoo have been named as helping in this process.

Yahoo recently settled a civil suit after it passed on the personal details of a Chinese blogger to the police. The man, Shi Tao, is now serving 10 years in a Chinese prison for criticising the state.

Google has already agreed to censor its search engine results for its Chinese portal, a decision co-founder Sergey Brin has said he regrets.

However, if YouTube is blocked it may cause a rethink by the company.

Tags:

Further reading

Sharp hike in cyber-attacks from China

Finjan reports new wave of malicious activity   More...

China telecoms boom drives equipment sales

Test market to approach $150m in five years   More...

Chinese video site denies piracy claim

Hollywood heavyweights gang up on Jeboo   More...

Young Chinese 'addicted' to the web

Online life 'more intense than reality' for many   More...

Related articles

Yahoo chief lobbies Rice on Chinese dissidents

Jerry Yang calls for pressure on China   More...

Congress savages Yahoo over China

Executives slammed as 'moral pigmies'   More...

Yahoo apologises for China mistakes

New documents force apology from general counsel Michael Callahan   More...

Yahoo settles China dissident case

Outside pressure gets too much   More...

Do you agree?

Advertisement

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Watch

09 May 2008

2.51 MBWiMax muddle, Google tactics and asteroid bunkum More...

08 May 2008

3.26 MBBroadband Anywhere, phone-free transport and Web 3.0 More...

07 May 2008

3.19 MBUK success, a paucity of IT women and robot wars More...

Poll

DATA ENCRYPTION

DATA ENCRYPTION

Should encryption be mandatory for all personal data held by companies and governments?

Previous poll results

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Spotlight

Ofcom

Ofcom outlines future wireless vision

Wi-Fi healthcare and intelligent car brakes in the pipeline   More...

HP

HP Labs opens doors to academia

Innovation Research Program invites proposals related to current research   More...

Advertisement

Asteroid

Nasa plans manned mission to asteroid

Bruce Willis thankfully not going   More...

MySpace

MySpace offers opt-in data sharing

Deals signed with Photobucket, Twitter, eBay and Yahoo   More...

Advertisement