<<<
Chronological Index
>>> <<<
Thread Index
>>>
[registrars] China Government tightens up on Registrars....
- To: registrars@xxxxxxxx
- Subject: [registrars] China Government tightens up on Registrars....
- From: Paul M Kane <Paul.Kane@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 24 Nov 2003 14:19:03 +0000
- Sender: owner-registrars@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.0; en-US; rv:1.4) Gecko/20030624 Netscape/7.1 (ax)
Fellow Registrars.....
The time is fast approaching when all registrars should be proactively
supporting the ICANN model - particularly with WSIS approaching.......
My next email may contain a few suggestions....
Best
Paul
<><><><><>
Published on TaipeiTimes <http://www.taipeitimes.com>
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/world/archives/2003/11/22/2003076827
China tightens its rules on Internet address managers
REUTERS , BEIJING
Saturday, Nov 22, 2003,Page 5
China has issued stricter rules for companies that manage Internet
addresses, in a move analysts said was designed to improve service
standards as well as tighten control over sensitive information in the
burgeoning sector.
Such firms, known in the industry as registrars, must now have a minimum
of one million yuan (US$121,000) in start-up capital, at least 15
employees and offer 24-hour customer service, the regulation, issued on
Thursday, said. Previous rules had been vague.
They "must have strict and effective filtering mechanisms for cleaning
bad and offensive domain names, which should be done once a day," the
Ministry of Information Industry, which issued the articles, said on its
Web site www.mii.gov.cn.
The firms, which number about 30 so far in China and serve mostly
companies with their own Web sites, must also be registered with the
powerful Ministry of Culture as proper Internet content providers, it said.
Industry watchers said the new rules formalized government control over
the fast-growing Internet domain name sector where not all participants
toe the Communist Party line on democracy, free speech and adult content.
"Small companies without an established investment and physical presence
are much more likely to disregard regulations," said Nathan Midler, a
research manager at IDC Asia Pacific.
"Companies with a substantial investment have a vested interest in
cooperating," he said.
Diplomats say Chinese leaders know they must promote the free flow of
information on the Internet for China to be a respected member of the
international community, but are unwilling to face the potential
criticism that freedom of speech can unleash.
Beijing has a special force of at least 30,000 "cyber cops" who patrol
the Web, block some foreign news sites and shut down domestic sites with
politically incorrect fare.
<<<
Chronological Index
>>> <<<
Thread Index
>>>
|