China cracking down on junk e-mail (AP) Updated: 2006-02-22 15:31
China is cracking down on junk e-mail and "illegal"
mobile phone text messages, the Xinhua News Agency said Tuesday.
 A woman checks her e-mail at an internet cafe
in Beijing. China issued new regulations on Internet e-mail, in an effort
to standardize registration procedures and crackdown on unwanted "spam"
advertising. [AFP] |
A new regulation will ban sending e-mail for advertising purposes to people
without their permission, and all advertising e-mail must be titled
"advertisement" or "AD," the agency said.
It also said that mobile phones must be registered under users' real names,
and that text messaging will be controlled more tightly due to the spread of
"illegal messages."
Treport did not describe what constituted illegal messages or how they would
be controlled, nor did it specify any penalties or say when the new rules would
take effect.
It's also not clear how well the rules could be enforced. Several countries
and U.S. states have anti-spam laws, yet junk e-mail continues to be an online
pest.
China now has 111 million Internet users, second only to the United States,
and Xinhua said Tuesday that each e-mail subscriber in China received an average
of 16.8 pieces of junk e-mail a week from August 2004 to April 2005.
"China has become seriously affected by junk e-mail," said Li Guobin, an
official with the country's Ministry of Information Industry.
On the mobile phone rules, state media already reported in December that
China would soon require that all mobile phone users — including the large
number who use prepaid phone cards — register with telecom providers or face a
service cutoff.
They said the measure was aimed at fighting unspecified telephone fraud, and
the use of counterfeit and otherwise illegally obtained mobile phones. It was
also expected to help authorities control "improper political commentary," the
December report said.
Furthermore, China published last fall an update to Internet regulations that
the China Daily said would cover text messages, a fast and efficient
communications means available to anyone with a mobile phone.
It was not immediately clear whether the mobile rules described Tuesday refer
to those announced earlier.
Filters block access to foreign Web sites deemed subversive or pornographic,
and Web sites in China are required to remove prohibited content.
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