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    Home » Sections » Social media » China punishes Tencent, ByteDance apps in renewed clampdown

    China punishes Tencent, ByteDance apps in renewed clampdown

    By Agency Staff23 June 2020
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    China has penalised 10 of the country’s most popular live-streaming apps, suspending some of their operations in a renewed crackdown on fast-growing services backed by Tencent and ByteDance.

    Regulators singled out ByteDance’s Xigua and three apps run by Tencent-backed firms — Bilibili, Huya and DouYu International — among those subject to punishments ranging from halting new user sign-ups to suspending content updates for “main channels”, the Cyberspace Administration of China said in a notice posted on Tuesday.

    The watchdog said those services must rectify vulgar and other problematic content and that it’s blacklisted selected live-streaming hosts, without elaborating. NetEase’s CC Live and Baidu’s Quanmin were also among those named.

    Beijing is intensifying scrutiny over the country’s Internet giants as they deepen forays into content and user contingents grow

    Beijing is intensifying scrutiny over the country’s Internet giants as they deepen forays into content and user contingents grow into the hundreds of millions. Live streaming in particular has burgeoned in past years as platforms from Bilibili to DouYu become vibrant social media forums that penetrate well beyond cities and into the countryside, enabling an explosion of communications that’s proven increasingly difficult to monitor. That in turn has fostered a growing cohort of online influencers with followings in the millions.

    It’s unclear what the content suspensions encompass. Both Huya and DouYu, which divide content into channels like games or entertainment, posted in the main recommendation section of their apps that they have “suspended updates” since Tuesday, without elaborating. Representatives for Baidu, Bilibili, ByteDance, Huya, NetEase and DouYu didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

    Accelerated

    The migration of viewership online during the pandemic has only accelerated the phenomenon. China’s top state broadcaster recently criticised Huya for hosting gaming ads in a channel offering free online courses for homebound students. In response, the company shut its learning page and offered refunds to minors who spent their parents’ money on games, the app said in a statement.

    In April, Chinese regulators suspended key channels in Baidu’s flagship mobile app, citing vulgar content. That two-week punishment could reduce revenue from its core search and feed business in the June quarter by close to 2%, according to an estimate by Jefferies analyst Thomas Chong.  — (c) 2020 Bloomberg LP

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