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真的吗? 今天的新闻:China Orders All Web Sites to Register |
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真的吗? 今天的新闻:China Orders All Web Sites to Register -- 不说难受 - (647 Byte) 2005-6-07 周二, 22:08 (2051 reads) |
neo [博客]

头衔: 海归中校 声望: 学员
加入时间: 2004/09/23 文章: 319 来自: Toronto 海归分: 35721
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作者:neo 在 海归商务 发贴, 来自【海归网】 http://www.haiguinet.com
SHANGHAI The authorities have ordered all China-based Web sites and blogs to register or be closed down, the latest effort by the Communist government to police the unruly world of cyberspace.
Commercial publishers and advertisers can face fines of as much as 1 million yuan, or $121,000, for failing to register, according to documents posted on the Ministry of Information Industry's Web site.
Private, noncommercial Web sites must register the complete identity of the person responsible for the site, it said. The ministry, which has set a June 30 deadline for compliance, said 74 percent of all sites were already registered.
"The Internet has profited many people, but it also has brought many problems, such as sex, violence and feudal superstitions and other harmful information that has seriously poisoned people's spirits," the ministry's site said in explaining the rules.
All public media in China are controlled by the state, though limits on the Internet have tended to lag those on others.
Beijing has long required all major commercial Web sites to register and take responsibility for Internet content. At least 54 people have been jailed for posting online essays or other content deemed subversive by the government.
SHANGHAI The authorities have ordered all China-based Web sites and blogs to register or be closed down, the latest effort by the Communist government to police the unruly world of cyberspace.
Commercial publishers and advertisers can face fines of as much as 1 million yuan, or $121,000, for failing to register, according to documents posted on the Ministry of Information Industry's Web site.
Private, noncommercial Web sites must register the complete identity of the person responsible for the site, it said. The ministry, which has set a June 30 deadline for compliance, said 74 percent of all sites were already registered.
"The Internet has profited many people, but it also has brought many problems, such as sex, violence and feudal superstitions and other harmful information that has seriously poisoned people's spirits," the ministry's site said in explaining the rules.
All public media in China are controlled by the state, though limits on the Internet have tended to lag those on others.
Beijing has long required all major commercial Web sites to register and take responsibility for Internet content. At least 54 people have been jailed for posting online essays or other content deemed subversive by the government.
SHANGHAI The authorities have ordered all China-based Web sites and blogs to register or be closed down, the latest effort by the Communist government to police the unruly world of cyberspace.
Commercial publishers and advertisers can face fines of as much as 1 million yuan, or $121,000, for failing to register, according to documents posted on the Ministry of Information Industry's Web site.
Private, noncommercial Web sites must register the complete identity of the person responsible for the site, it said. The ministry, which has set a June 30 deadline for compliance, said 74 percent of all sites were already registered.
"The Internet has profited many people, but it also has brought many problems, such as sex, violence and feudal superstitions and other harmful information that has seriously poisoned people's spirits," the ministry's site said in explaining the rules.
All public media in China are controlled by the state, though limits on the Internet have tended to lag those on others.
Beijing has long required all major commercial Web sites to register and take responsibility for Internet content. At least 54 people have been jailed for posting online essays or other content deemed subversive by the government.
SHANGHAI The authorities have ordered all China-based Web sites and blogs to register or be closed down, the latest effort by the Communist government to police the unruly world of cyberspace.
Commercial publishers and advertisers can face fines of as much as 1 million yuan, or $121,000, for failing to register, according to documents posted on the Ministry of Information Industry's Web site.
Private, noncommercial Web sites must register the complete identity of the person responsible for the site, it said. The ministry, which has set a June 30 deadline for compliance, said 74 percent of all sites were already registered.
"The Internet has profited many people, but it also has brought many problems, such as sex, violence and feudal superstitions and other harmful information that has seriously poisoned people's spirits," the ministry's site said in explaining the rules.
All public media in China are controlled by the state, though limits on the Internet have tended to lag those on others.
Beijing has long required all major commercial Web sites to register and take responsibility for Internet content. At least 54 people have been jailed for posting online essays or other content deemed subversive by the government.
作者:neo 在 海归商务 发贴, 来自【海归网】 http://www.haiguinet.com
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