• CNNIC Closes 699 Porn Sites
    12/17/2009 - 10:32

    The China Internet Network Information Center (CNNIC) shut down 699 websites with pornographic content from December 10 to 14, reports Sina. The state-controlled CNNIC found the sites by following up on the reports the public lodged on its hotline, which opened on December 10. The sites were closed down after CNNIC employees verified the reports. CNNIC has also shut down more than 8,000 phishing sites in 2009.

  • Rival Online Video Sites Benefit From BitTorrent Shutdown
    12/17/2009 - 10:30

    Chinese Internet users have turned to other online video sites for their content fix following last week's closure of some of China's largest BitTorrent sites, reports National Business Daily. Popular video sites such as Tudou.com and 56.com have reported 10% to 20% jumps in traffic compared to the previous week. Wang Jianjun, CEO of 56.com, said "The increase in traffic occurred right after the BitTorrent sites were shut down but I’m not sure whether it will continue to grow."

  • CNNIC Halts Website Domain Name Registration for Individuals
    12/17/2009 - 10:29

    Chinese domain name supervisor, the China Internet Network Information Center (CNNIC), announced that it closed domain name registrations for individual users from 21:00 on December 14, 2009. According to China Tech, users who want to apply for domain names must now provide written application materials, including an enterprise business license.

    CNNIC said it has conducted an audit of the companies providing domain name registration services. Three companies have been punished as a result: Zhengzhou Dahuang Network Development Company, Beijing Xinnet Digital Information Technology Company, and Beijing Blinux Network Technology Company.

  • SARFT Launches Annual Review of TV & Radio Producers
    12/17/2009 - 10:28

    The State Administration of Radio, Film and TV (SARFT) has asked its provincial regulatory branches to start their annual audit of licensed TV and radio content producers, according to a December 3 circular. The broadcast industry regulator will investigate whether producers have compiled with relevant laws and audit the quality and quantity of the content they produced in 2009. The results of the audit will be released in March 2010.

  • Sun TV signal blocked in China
    12/17/2009 - 10:27

    Hong Kong-based channel Sun TV saw its tacit permission to re-broadcast on mainland cable networks revoked on December 5. According to an unnamed source quoted by the Hollywood Reporter, SARFT did not inform the company of the decision. The move is not thought to affect the channel's carriage via the official Chinasat platform to foreigners’ compounds and 3/4/5 star hotels.