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Beijing has launched repeated crackdowns against online pornography and fraud and has taken steps in recent months to block use of the Web by activists to spread criticism of the government. China on Thursday strengthened a law to require telecommunications and internet companies to inform on customers who discuss state secrets
-- an area so broadly defined that both companies and Chinese citizens have struggled to know just what a state secret is. In February, the government announced that individuals who want to operate websites must meet in person with regulators and submit photos of themselves. In April, three people who posted material online about the death of a pregnant woman in police custody were sentenced to prison by a court in southern China. They were convicted of slander.
[Associated
Press]
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