China
to ban online impersonation accounts, enforce real-name
registration
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[February 04, 2015]
BEIJING (Reuters) - China will ban
from March 1 internet accounts that impersonate people or organizations,
and enforce the requirement that people use real names when registering
accounts online, its internet watchdog said on Wednesday.
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China has repeatedly made attempts to require internet users to
register for online accounts using their real names, although with
mixed success.
The ban on impersonations includes accounts that purport to be
government bodies, such as China's anti-corruption agency and news
organizations like the People's Daily state newspaper, as well as
accounts that impersonate foreign leaders, such as U.S. President
Barack Obama and Russia's Vladimir Putin, the Cyberspace
Administration of China (CAC) said on its website.
Many users of social media create parody accounts of prominent
figures and institutions to poke fun at them.
The new regulations are part of efforts to impose real-name
registration requirements on internet users and halt the spread of
rumors online, CAC said.
The measure reflects China's tightening control of the internet,
which has accelerated since President Xi Jinping took power in early
2013.
Internet companies will have the responsibility to enforce the
rules, said the CAC. Among these are Tencent Holdings Ltd <0700.HK>,
which runs hugely popular instant messaging services WeChat and QQ,
and microblog operator Weibo Corp <WB.O>, as well as several online
forums.
Weibo strongly supports adoption of the regulations and will
strengthen its management efforts, a spokesman said by e-mail. In
the past month, Weibo has removed 293 accounts with "harmful names",
including those which are political, pornographic and related to
public security, he said.
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Tencent declined immediate comment.
China operates one of the world's most sophisticated online
censorship mechanisms, known as the Great Firewall. Censors keep a
tight grip on what can be published online, particularly content
seen as potentially undermining the ruling Communist Party.
On Tuesday, the CAC accused NetEase Inc <NTES.O>, a U.S.-listed
Chinese web portal, of spreading rumors and pornography. And last
month, 133 WeChat accounts were shut down for "distorting history",
state media reported.
(Reporting by Paul Carsten; Editing by Jason Subler)
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