| China crackdown on 'dirty' mobile messages(AFP)
 Updated: 2005-10-09 09:18
 China has ordered telecom operators to clean up 
the content of spam short messages spread on their mobile phone networks as part 
of an ongoing fight against "unhealthy" influences. 
 
 "Recently, there has been a lot of dirt hidden in the telecommunication 
networks. The situation is serious," the ministry of information industry said 
in a notice on its website Friday. 
  Messages containing text or pictures with pornographic or superstitious 
content such as fortune telling and sex chat are frequently sent to mobile phone 
users en masse, the ministry said.
 This is in breach of national regulations that ban the production and 
spreading of such content, which has "polluted the society and spread very bad 
influence," it said. 
 Throughout October, the ministry will check telecom companies for compliance 
and will prosecute those that breach the rules, Beijing News reported. 
 China has more than 100 million Internet users and some 358 million mobile 
phone users, with both areas growing rapidly as the country's economy booms. 
 The government's latest move signifies a step-up in its campaign to rein in 
the spread of information outside official media, such as via mobile phones and 
the Internet, which it fears could cause unrest. 
 A set of revised Internet rules was issued last month that requires Internet 
operators to re-register their news sites and police them for content that could 
"endanger state security" and "social order." 
 They target sites that publish fabricated information or pornography and 
forbid content that "harms national security, reveals state secrets, subverts 
political power, (and) undermines national unity," state media 
said. 
 
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