China orders real name register for online video uploads

Published January 21, 2014
China's President Xi Jinping attends a news conference at Los Pinos Presidential Palace in Mexico City in this June 4, 2013 file photograph. — Reuters Photo
China's President Xi Jinping attends a news conference at Los Pinos Presidential Palace in Mexico City in this June 4, 2013 file photograph. — Reuters Photo

BEIJING: Chinese Internet users are now required to register their real names to upload videos to Chinese online video sites, an official body said, as the Communist Party tightens its control of the Internet and media to suppress anti-government sentiment.

The new rule has been implemented to "prevent vulgar content, base art forms, exaggerated violence and sexual content in Internet video having a negative effect on society," China's State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television (SARFT) said on its website on Monday.

Online video sites are often a lodestone for comment and critique on social issues in China, with users uploading videos documenting corruption, injustice and abuse carried out by government officials and authorities.

Online video sites are extremely popular in China, with 428 million users. Those allowing user uploads include sites operated by Youku Tudou Inc and Renren Inc.

Neither Youku Tudou nor Renren were available for immediate comment.

Last year the Communist Party began a heavy-handed campaign to control online discourse, threatening legal action against people whose perceived rumors on microblogs such as Sina Weibo are reposted more than 500 times or seen by more than 5,000 people.

Rights groups and dissidents criticized the latest crackdown as another tool for the ruling Communist Party to limit criticism of it and to further control freedom of expression.

China has attempted to implement similar real-name registration rules, including when buying SIM cards for mobile phones and signing up for Tencent's WeChat mobile messaging app and microblogs.

However these have proven difficult to implement and easy to avoid for China's tech-savvy Internet population.

China's Internet regulation system is mired in bureaucracy and overseen by a number of government agencies, including SARFT, the State Council and the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, which can lead to conflicts of interest between these bodies.

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