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China The Internet

China Tells Its Tech Giants To Stop Blocking Rivals' Links (usnews.com) 27

"China fired a fresh regulatory shot at its tech giants on Monday," writes Reuters, "telling them to end a long-standing practice of blocking each other's links on their sites or face consequences." The comments, made by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) at a news briefing, mark the latest step in Beijing's broad regulatory crackdown that has ensnared sectors from technology to education and property and wiped billions of dollars off the market value of some of the country's largest companies.

China's internet is dominated by a handful of technology giants which have historically blocked links and services by rivals on their platforms. Restricting normal access to internet links without proper reason "affects the user experience, damages the rights of users and disrupts market order," said MIIT spokesperson Zhao Zhiguo, adding that the ministry had received reports and complaints from users since it launched a review of industry practices in July. "At present we are guiding relevant companies to carry out self-examination and rectification," he said, citing instant messaging platforms as one of the first areas they were targeting.

He did not specify what the consequences would be for companies that failed to abide by the new guidelines.

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China Tells Its Tech Giants To Stop Blocking Rivals' Links

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  • by ewibble ( 1655195 ) on Sunday September 19, 2021 @04:29PM (#61811539)

    If only western countries didn't take this kind nonsense from large corporations.

    • Old Chinese proverb: FAANG is only blunted when it must bite something abrasive.
    • Totalitarianism is starting to look pretty good right now.
      • Any government that can actually deliver the basic functions of government looks good right now. Too bad we're not likely to see it anytime soon.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Some of them don't. I'm not sure if this exact thing has ever come up in Europe, but similar stuff has were users are banned from accessing rival services for no technical reason.

    • by Aubz ( 7986666 )
      China is not going to let a bunch of arrogant assbergerers start running their country. Good. The West should start reading the riot act to the pencil neck dictators running Google, Facebook, Amazon and the rest of them, that think that its their way or no way. Screw them.
    • by piojo ( 995934 )

      I had that thought, too. It's helpful that western culture prevents some of these shenanigans--most programmer employees wouldn't even be willing to implement competitive censorship--but there are other cases of anti-consumer behavior that our government does nothing about. The US government loves big business and jobs, but perhaps doesn't see that pro-consumer behavior enables competition (more jobs) and individual flourishing. (Though it's not necessarily good for an economy when a small company with few

  • by Antique Geekmeister ( 740220 ) on Sunday September 19, 2021 @05:20PM (#61811663)

    " Restricting normal access to internet links without proper reason " is reserved for governments, as the Falun Gong and Uyghurs of China, the political protesters of the Arab Spring, and Wikileaks can testify.

    • Do you even China? There are far more low hanging fruit to complain about.They block Wikipedia, Facebook, Reddit, and virtually any western news source. Shit steam community is blocked.

      Falun gong preaches that their exercises can cure cancer. Uyghurs are fairly extreme and abrasive for a Muslim group. Right now Uyghurs are one of the groups Afghanistan is blaming terrorism on too and multiple terrorist incidents happened in China by this minority. Don't know what's up with Arab Spring but I would guess it w

      • The difficulty is not so much when a government sees itself as having parental responsibility. It's when they refuse to allow the children choices to grow up, and trap them in a safe space in which only approved speech can be heard.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Not just governments, big media corporations also like to block normal web links to protect their copyrights. Chances are many of the people reading this comment can't open https://thepiratebay.org/ [thepiratebay.org] .

  • by The Evil Atheist ( 2484676 ) on Sunday September 19, 2021 @05:51PM (#61811737)

    wiped billions of dollars off the market value

    No it didn't. The value didn't exist in the first place. Seriously, if merely allowing links to competitors to be posted can make that "value" disappear, then the value wasn't there in the first place.

    • Alternatively, it transferred money to those other competitors, which had more value in the first place.

      • But not enough to make it anywhere close to the supposed "value" of what was "wiped". It's literarily the Emperor's new clothes.

        Maybe you can argue the shedding of the illusion means more money is now available to the wider economy for real value, but I wonder how many entities were relying on their investment to be maintained. I would hazard that it still costs more to the economy than benefit. Really should have tear down the wall sooner.
  • He did not specify what the consequences would be for companies that failed to abide by the new guidelines.

    Why would he need to? Everyone and their dog know what the consequences will be -- no "would" about them.

  • Does that mean China will allow talking about tiananmen square now?
  • Such as references to Mao's death toll, the Tiananmen Square Massacre, Xinjiang concentration camps, or the freedoms previously enjoyed in Hong Kong.

    The key to survival in an authoritarian state is resistance to the natural nausea you feel when confronted by lies and bullying. Your ability to lick boots and smile determines your potential for success.
  • "Only block the things we tell you to"

Term, holidays, term, holidays, till we leave school, and then work, work, work till we die. -- C.S. Lewis

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