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    Chinese move to censor chatroom messages

Chinese port city of Xiamen to censor web chats following protest over chemical plant organised online.

By Reuters, 9 Jul 2007 at 08:49

A Chinese city is planning to filter online chatroom messages and block anonymous postings following a mass protest by residents against a chemical plant that was organised online.

The city government of Xiamen, a port city in the south-eastern coastal Fujian province, has put out a new city regulation compelling users to use their real names when posting messages on more than 100,000 websites registered in the city, the Beijing Youth Daily said.

"The names registered must be the same as the ones on your identity card," it quoted an unnamed government official as saying, adding postings would be screened in advance of being posted and any unacceptable material would be blocked.

Internet censorship is common in China, where the government employs an elaborate system of filters and tens of thousands of human monitors to survey its 140 million internet users' surfing habits, surgically clipping sensitive content.

The government had been considering a regulation to require bloggers to use their real names when they register their blogs, but backed down later following protests from the internet industry and users.

Last month, thousands of protesters wearing gas masks and holding banners marched through Xiamen, demanding the government scrap plans to build a chemical plant some denounced as an "atomic bomb" threatening the seaside environment.

The citizens had organised the protest and exchanged information and comments through web chatrooms, blogs and mobile text messages.

"After the protest against the project, the government thinks it should control the contents of the internet," the official was quoted as saying.

"Those who illegally spread harmful or bad information will be detained or fined," the newspaper said, citing the planned regulation.

The Chinese government, obsessed with stability, has said internet censorship is necessary to allow users to enjoy a "healthy" online environment and help build a "harmonious" society.

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