Administrators of major websites in China, who are responsible for screening online postings, are already required to register their real names, the China Daily said. “We are also exploring an identity authentication system for users of online bulletin board systems,” Wang Chen, the head of the State Council Information Office, was quoted as saying. Wang, who is also the vice head of the ruling Communist Party’s propaganda department, did not specify when the system would be introduced or how it would work.
Web users currently have to log on to major news portals before sending postings–effectively banning anonymous comments. But they are not yet required to provide their real names to the websites in the first place. Wang’s comments marked the first time the central government has confirmed it was pushing for an online real-name registration system, the report said. The issue has sparked fierce debate in China since it was first raised several years ago, amid concerns over the impact on freedom of speech and privacy.
Beijing operates an extensive system of Internet censorship –sometimes dubbed the “Great Firewall of China”–aimed at filtering out any information deemed politically sensitive or harmful. China’s web users have nevertheless turned the Internet into a forum for citizens to express their opinions–some of them anti-government–in a way rarely seen in a country where the traditional media is under strict control.
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