China is to ban foreign firms from “online publishing” under new rules
issued this week, as the country increasingly seeks to minimise Western
influence.
Chinese websites are already among the world’s most censored, with Beijing
blocking many foreign Internet services with a system known as the “Great
Firewall of China”.
Regulations posted on a government website, set to go into force next
month, state that foreign firms “are not to engage in online publishing”.
The regulations define online publishing as the provision over the Internet
of books, maps, music, cartoons, computer games and “thoughtful text”, as well
as other content.
It was unclear how the ban would be enforced or whether it would be applied
to websites hosted on China-based servers or sites aimed at users in China.
The State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television
(SAPPRFT), which issued a draft of the rules, could not immediately be
contacted by AFP.
The regulations say any Chinese publishers cooperating with foreign firms
to provide online content would need prior approval from the body.
Chinese publishing expert Xu Yi told AFP that the implications of the rules
were unclear.
“I think these regulations provide a legal basis for the government to
manage foreign companies setting up websites in China,” he said.
“I don’t think this means that websites opened by foreigners in China will
be forced to close…it all depends on the Chinese government’s intentions”.
Writing on the website Tech In Asia, veteran China watcher Charles Custer
said the rules were an attempt by SAPPRFT to play a bigger role in content
management, previously seen as the domain of other government agencies.
“SAPPRFT has traditionally been a regulator of offline publications, but it
has increasingly been flexing its online muscles over the past decade, and
occasionally clashing with other censorship organs,” he said.
“In practice, the new regulation isn’t likely to change much beyond adding
another hurdle would-be publishers have to jump through,” he added.
The regulations come at a time of heightened political restrictions in
China.
Authorities have proposed a new law to control the activities of foreign
non-governmental organisations, while state media have warned of “hostile
foreign forces” said to be using them to foment revolution.
In recent years, censors in Beijing have moved to ban certain TV shows and
movies from abroad from being shown online and authorities have decried
“Western” influence on the country’s educational system.
In the past, media organisations such as the New York Times, the Wall
Street Journal and Reuters have made big bets on the Chinese hunger for foreign
news perspectives, setting up local language websites, only to find them
blocked in the country.
Despite the Great Firewall, China has the world’s largest Internet
population of nearly 700 million, making firms such as Facebook keen to enter
the market.
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