China's mobile phone users will have to register using their real names
starting next year, according to the Ministry of Information Industry (MII).
The new rule will apply not only to new users, but also about 200 million
pre-paid cell phone users, Wang Lijian, dean of MII's News Department, said on
Sunday.
Currently, half of the country's 400 million cell phone users pre-pay for
their mobile service provided by China Mobile and China Unicom. And most are not
required to register before buying a new phone number.
Ministry officials said the real-name registration system would help curb the
surging number of mobile phone crimes.
Statistics from the Ministry of Public Security suggest that most mobile
phone-related crimes are committed by those registered under fake names.
Experts say that implementing the real-name system may hit China's mobile
telecom operators hard in short term because of fewer new users and increased
operational costs.
"The operators will suffer a temporary decrease in the number of consumers
and short message services (SMS) as people may not like having to provide their
ID cards for a phone number," Xu Junqi, vice-dean with the Policy-Making
Institute of the Telecommunications Research Centre under MII, said yesterday.
"The operators also have to invest a lot in updating their technical
facilities and service network to meet the new requirement."
Telecom value-added service providers are also expected to see their profits
drop after the new system takes effect.
But Xu stressed that the new system will benefit both mobile phone users and
operators in the long term as it protects the consumer interests and reduces
operators' management risks.
MII experts participating in drafting the new system said that the system has
included provisions to protect the privacy of personal information.
Public reaction last December was almost evenly split. An online survey
conducted by Sohu.com found that 44.9 per cent of 1,911 respondents favoured
using ID to set up mobile phone accounts, and 42.1 per cent opposed it.
A survey conducted by China Central Television in September 2005 showed that
88 per cent of the 12,522 respondents said they had received illegal text
messages such as fake notices of winning prizes, pornographic information and
ads for fake diplomas and illegal firearms.