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"If there is sexual, violent or other sorts of content unsuitable for young people, then that content will be blocked," said Chen Ying, vice director of the ministry's department of software services industry. However, the software requirement has prompted widespread derision among China's more than 250 million Internet users, who either accept government controls or have learned to evade them. Users also mocked a temporary block on networking and image-sharing Web sites such as Twitter and Flickr last week over the 20th anniversary of the bloody crackdown on Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests. An earlier attempt to ban foreign video content from Chinese sites fizzled with little fanfare. The new software's blocking of content about homosexuality prompted a letter of protest from a coalition of Chinese advocacy groups representing gays and AIDS sufferers in the country. Such content is crucial for psychological and emotional health, and it is "absolutely reasonable and beneficial, as a result, to see the sites accessible over the Internet," the groups said in an open letter e-mailed to journalists. The move to require the new software "is turning out to be more controversial and unwelcome than decision-makers would like to believe," the official English-language newspaper China Daily said in an editorial Thursday under the headline "Questionable Move."
[Associated
Press;
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