Subject: China orders online sellers to register personal details
  This thread has been closed by sexyloser at 18-5-2024 08:46. 
atomic3d
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Post at 1-7-2010 14:29  Profile P.M. 
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China orders online sellers to register personal details

The interesting part of this article is the last two sentences. Will this effect the members of 141 forum in China and HK/Macau?

China orders online sellers to register personal details
                From correspondents in Beijing From:
AFP July 01, 2010 3:44PM
ONLINE sellers in China will have to provide their real names and addresses or pay hefty fines under new rules introduced today, in Beijing's latest move to tighten control of the web.
Individuals wanting to sell products or services on the internet now have to submit their personal details to online retail websites such as Taobao or eBay, according to the rules issued by the State Administration for Industry and Commerce.

The government has the right to fine individuals up to 10,000 yuan ($1745) if they fail to provide their personal information to the website operators, the government department said.

Retail websites could also face fines of up to 30,000 yuan ($5237) if they neglect to register the details of sellers or refuse to hand over such information to authorities investigating illegal business activities.

Internet shopping is seeing huge growth in China thanks to expanding use of the web and of bank and credit cards, as well as rising confidence in China has the world's largest population of internet users, estimated at 404 million people, according to official figures.
China operates a vast system of web censorship, sometimes referred to as the "Great Firewall," that blocks access to or censors content deemed unacceptable, ranging from pornography to political dissent.

In a move seen as a further tightening measure, state media reported in May that authorities would introduce a system requiring web users to provide their real names before posting comments online.

The issue has sparked fierce debate since it was first raised several years ago, due to concerns at the impact on freedom of speech and privacy.

Link here:
http://www.news.com.au/business/ ... rfkur-1225886773944
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twiceAweek
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Post at 1-7-2010 14:34  Profile P.M. 
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Reply #1 atomic3d's post

I don't think this will effect anyone in HK & Macau, as for users of 141 in China ... its already very limited anyway
and most of the time the only through is to use proxies
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