China Blocked 54.3 Million Items Online in 2022

China Blocked 54.3 Million Items Online in 2022
Photo: unsplash.com 03.03.2023 608

The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) has put numbers to its drive to reshape the local internet, claiming it cleaned up 54.3 million pieces of information it deemed illegal and bad in 2022 alone.

The CAC announced that during 2022 it had also removed 420 mobile applications and closed more than 25,000 illegal websites. Shutdowns of live broadcast and short video platforms for pornographic or illegal content and gambling tallied 106. Developers for such platforms were blocklisted.

Tencent's game streaming sites DouYu and Huya, and Douyin – the app known as TikTok outside China – were mentioned alongside other platforms shamed for spreading pornographic material, vulgarity and abuse. The three were fined and told to clean up their acts – mild punishment compared to the thousands of other sites that were shuttered by the regulator.

In May of last year the CAC published guidelines to stop livestreaming platforms like Huya, DouYu and Douyin from soliciting money and gifts from minors.

Not all of the actions mentioned above were the result of CAC assessments of sites' content. The regulator also enabled a crowdsourcing of internet governance, using more than 4,100 reporting channels. Netizens collectively reported 172 million cases of "harmful information such as pornography, gambling, infringement and rumors."

According to the CAC, publishing the data above is not a mission accomplished declaration – it has its mind set on more online crackdowns.

The regulator has been on a mission to make the internet "more civilized" since 2020. It issued edict after edict, targeting everything from digital fan clubs to more internationally consequential personal data protection.

Source: The Register

digital markets  China 

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