Cleaner, healthier Internet urged (china.org) Updated: 2006-03-01 10:45 Chief executives from China's overseas-listed
Internet firms and industry experts met at a seminar in Hainan Province
last Saturday to discuss issues concerning the smooth and healthy growth of the
country's Internet industry.
Experts and sector representatives expressed the hope that the government
would improve the legal framework to better guide its growth. They said that
some self-governing rules by the Internet firms on forbidding porn and illegal
information have been well-received by the public.
Li Jiaming, director general of China Reporting Center of Illegal and
Unhealthy Information, said his department has received more than 240,000
reports from the public complaining about illicit or irregular Internet-related
content and acts, since its launch in June 2004.
Of those complaints, 127,010 or 68.2 percent reported in 2005 are porn
related. The reporting center also received thousands of letters, the majority
of which were from parents, teachers and students. People from all walks of life
expressed their support for the work of the reporting center.
Li said many people expressed in their letters extreme concerns about the
pernicious effects of porn and illegal websites on the young and called for
harsh punitive actions against offenders. Some parents are so gravely worried
about the influence of such websites on their children that many resorted to
writing "Please help save our children!"in their letters.
He cited one letter from a mother in Taiyuan City, Shanxi Province, which
read: "I strongly support the government's regulating of the Internet. If the
government didn't deal with it, the Internet would be flooded with harmful
information and no parent would want that."
In their letters, many people expressed their indignation that some websites
work solely for profits, while ignoring their social responsibilities. A man
surnamed Zhan from Beijing's Dongcheng District said he would not sit idle while
seeing pernicious information on the internet "ruining our young generation".
Li cautioned about the long and hard road to achieving a clean and healthy
cyberspace due to the complex nature of the Internet business.
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