Wednesday, January 20, 2010

For Pornography Crackdown, China to Scan Text Messages


Chinese mobile providers are up with a new way to keep China free from unhealthy content. They will now monitor all the text messages in the nation for "illegal or unhealthy content" and will immediately suspend service when any customer sets up such a red flag, according to a report in The New York Times.


Leading companies like China Mobile will turn the potentially offending messages over to the authorities to be reviewed. If the customer is cleared of any wrongdoing, his or her service will be restored, but it doesn’t look like the mobile providers or authorities are going out of their way to clearly define what constitutes an offense.

Police will provide words to scan to catch potential criminals in the name of fighting pornography. We reported a couple of weeks ago that more than 5,000 arrests were made on pornography charges in 2009 to prevent the scourge from “overwhelming the country’s Internet and threatening the emotional health of children.”

We’re not sure which words are on the list, but the Times quotes Beijing University telecommunications professor Kan Kaili who claims that “they are doing wide-ranging checks, checking anything and everything, even if it is between a husband and wife.”

Married couples? That could be a problem for the pornography flags, people. Google has threatened to leave the country if China doesn’t make an effort to improve freedom of speech.

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