Chinese city to fine Web surfers in online satire crackdown

   Date:2006/12/31

The price of Internet satire in China is going up.

A major city is threatening to fine Web surfers up to 5,000 Yuan ($625) for online defamation amid a surge in short satirical Internet films.

The new rules enacted in Chongqing, a major industrial city in China's southwest, against "online defamation" come as Beijing tries to tighten control over the freewheeling Internet.

The rules target Web users "who spread information or remark defaming others, launch personal attacks or damage others' reputations online."

Potential violations included posting online video "to satirize others or social phenomena."

Video spoofs have become so popular that Chinese have coined a new slang term, "egao," to describe the act of using real film clips to create mocking send ups.

China's government encourages Internet use for business and education but tries to block access to material deemed obscene or subversive.

Government film regulators announced new rules in August meant to rein in the fad by allowing only authorized major Web sites to show short films online.

 

Source:佚名

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