Nine Chinese websites are being fined and blocked from running
illegal online music services, according to China's Ministry of
Culture recently.
The ministry has completed a check of website operators in the
past three months, and has singled out nine websites that were
illegally selling music for which they didn't have the distribution
rights or had not applied for authorization to sell the music and
conduct online commerce.
The ministry said that www.9sky.com and www.music.sogua.com were
asked to pay fines and stop their illegal services, as they didn't
have approval to conduct online commercial activities.
Two other websites, www.a8.com and www.music.tyfo.com, will be
fined for offering foreign music not officially approved by the
ministry.
"They should stop the service and submit their play list to the
ministry for approval." it said.
The ministry didn't elaborate on the other suspended websites,
saying their investigation is continuing.
Local cultural departments also banned games containing
obscenity, gambling and excessive violence, including "BloodRayne
2" and "Obsure."
Companies publishing "FreeStyle Street Basketball" and "Legends
of Empire" were fined for selling these online games without
official approval.
Cultural authorities in Sichuan, Hubei, Henan, Jiangsu provinces and
Chongqing municipality closed down 29 private servers for illegally
providing online games.
"It is necessary to crack down on illegal Internet business to
ensure better protection of intellectual property rights," an
official with the ministry told Xinhua.
Statistics show that China has 111 million Internet users,
second only to the United States.
Last year, China's online music sales totaled 3.6 billion yuan
(US$450 million) and sales of online games amounted to 2billion
yuan (US$250 million).
(Xinhua News Agency August 11, 2006)