Archive for the ‘广电总局’ Category

如是我闻:广电总局再度加强互联网视听节目内容管理

星期二, 三月 31st, 2009

昨天,广电总局在其官方网站上公布了《关于加强互联网视听节目内容管理的通知》(中新网报道)。按照该通知的第二条、第四条、第五条,目前各大视频网站,尤其是像PPS、PPlive之类站点上90%以上的内容都应该被拿掉或剪掉。鉴于视频网站不可能有那么多人手来干剪片的活儿,那只好拿掉了。

例如第二条中的:

(六)宣扬看相、算命、看风水、占卜、驱鬼治病等封建迷信活动的;
(九)表现或隐晦表现性行为、性过程、性方式及与此关联的过多肉体接触等细节的;
(十一)带有性暗示、性挑逗等易使人产生性联想的;
(十二)宣扬婚外恋、多角恋、一夜情、性虐待和换妻等不健康内容的;
(十四)有强烈刺激性的凶杀、血腥、暴力、自杀、绑架、吸毒、赌博、灵异等情节的;
(十五)有过度惊吓恐怖的画面、字幕、背景音乐及声音效果的;
(十八)以肯定、赞许的基调或引人模仿的方式表现打架斗殴、羞辱他人、污言秽语的;
(十九)宣扬消极、颓废的人生观、世界观和价值观,刻意渲染、夸大民族愚昧落后或社会阴暗面的;
(二十)国家广播电影电视总局禁止传播的影视节目以及电影、电视剧的删减片段;
(二十一)违反相关法律、法规精神的。

以及第四条:

互联网视听节目服务单位传播的影视剧,必须符合广播电影电视管理的有关规定,依法取得广播影视行政部门颁发的《电影片公映许可证》、《电视剧发行许可证》或《电视动画片发行许可证》;传播的理论文献影视片须依法取得广播影视行政部门颁发的《理论文献影视片播映许可证》。未取得《电影片公映许可证》的境内外电影片、未取得《电视剧发行许可证》的境内外电视剧、未取得《电视动画片发行许可证》的境内外动画片以及未取得《理论文献影视片播映许可证》的理论文献影视片,一律不得在互联网上传播。

第五条是关于版权保护。

但是这并不意味着网民将告别美剧与大片。这一《通知》的约束对象,主要是“互联网视听节目服务单位”而非普通个人。这些单位是商业机构,抛开意识形态上的东西不讲,把商业利润建立在盗版基础上,本来也非长久之计。如果广电总局真的大力执行了该通知。那么FTP、BT、电骡等渠道将成为网民消费国外影视的主流选择。当然,也不排除这次又是雷声大雨点小,有决策而难实施的可能。


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China Media Digest 0902 (week5-6)

星期日, 二月 8th, 2009

2008 China Internet Communication Report

Click to download the English version of the report The report is released by NetEase.com, Inc. (163.com,网易), one of the leading Internet technology companies in China, in January, 2009. The report includes an annual top-10 ranking of Internet Hot Figures, Internet Hot Key Words, Entertainment Stars, Sports Persons, Entrepreneurs, Hot Movies, Hot Music Singles, Hot TV series, Fund companies, and A-share listed companies. The report summarizes facts of maximum interest to Chinese netizens in these ten fields as well as highlights common features and the latest status of such information. According to the report,

Who determines the report result? There are about 200 million netizens in China who are active in the application of various NetEase Internet products. They come from different regions of China and are engaged in different industries, but every click or search they have done, and any words they have posted on the Internet, have contributed to this report.

How was the data analyzed? The data was analyzed by collecting original data from five system platforms of NetEase, i.e., NetEase Blog, NetEase BBS, Youdao Search Engine, Netease Channels, and NetEase Posts. Such data were then used for linear conversion and linear transformation by standard statistical methods without changing the data order or distribution form. This produced a normal status measure, called the Internet transmission index, for each respective collection item.

It’s really worth reading if you are interested in the culture of China society and Chinese cyberspace. Just click the links to download the English version and Chinese version. Other related links:

Film ratings system: news, fake news or “old news” ?

Tong Gang in 2004

Tong Gang in 2004

From Danwei:

On February 2, Beijing Business Today ran a report under the headline “Tong Gang: A film ratings system will not permit Cat-III films.” The article reported that China had completed work on a law that would implement a film ratings system without opening the door to porn, and featured extensive quotes from Film Bureau director Tong Gang.

Implementing a film ratings system is a contentious issue that has been kicking around for years, so Tong’s disclosure, if correct, has the potential to bring major changes to the domestic film industry.

Too bad it’s not true: the director did utter the words quoted in the article, but he said them in an interview with The Beijing News in 2004.

Some Newspapers and even Xinhua were deceived by the story of Beijing Business Today. They used the headline such as “China completes motion picture law, banning porn, violence contents”. Unfortunately, it seems just a clumsy copy of a five-year-old interview.

A ‘Chinese CNN’

Following the first topic in CMD 0901, Peter Ford, a staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor, quoted the comment from two Chinese scholars in his article “Beijing launching a ‘Chinese CNN’ to burnish image abroad”,

“China’s image is very important, but the first question is the image of the medium itself,” cautions Gong Wenxiang, journalism professor at Peking University. “If the medium lacks credibility, it is unthinkable that it will improve the country’s image.”

“The strength of our voice does not match our position in the world,” complains Yu Guoming, deputy dean of the journalism school at People’s University in Beijing, who has acted as a consultant on the government’s TV project.

“That affects the extent to which China is accepted by the world,” Professor Yu adds. “If our voice does not match our role, however strong we are we remain a crippled giant.”

“The outreach effort is very natural because of the growing strength of the nation,” says Professor Gong. “They [officials] are clear about what to say but they don’t know how to say it with the best results.”

And so long as the party insists on controlling the media, China will have difficulty convincing foreign viewers to consider its point of view, he adds. “They have realized the problem of cross-cultural communications, but before serious political reform takes place they cannot do much.”

Anti-anti-vulgarity Campaign: Put Clothes on Famous Paintings

spring

Chinese Internet users angered by censorship in cyberspace have dressed up images of famous renaissance nudes in a protest against Beijing’s crackdown on ‘vulgar’ online content. The campaign of “Put Clothes on Famous Paintings” (给名画穿衣服)

Via “Protest against Web crackdown”

dance

The protest began last week after a user of the social networking site Douban.com complained that images of several paintings, including Titian’s nude ‘Venus of Urbino’, had been deleted from an online photo album.

According to blogs on the site, Douban’s administrators had told the user that posting pornography would endanger the site’s operations.

In response, protest’s organisers asked Internet users to clothe artwork to ’save’ it from the censors, who have shut down 1,635 websites and 200 blogs in a one-month campaign against content that ‘harms public morality’.

The protest are not limited to 16th century art – one Internet user drew red underpants on the leaning, joined towers of state-run China Central Television’s headquarters in Beijing.

Also see the blog post “Chinese Netizens’ Anti-anti-vulgarity Campaign: Putting Clothes on Renaissance Paintings”.

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More fancy pictures, check these blogs: Digging Pictures, Snower41.

Other Links you might be interested in

The China Media Digest is released by China Media Centre weekly. It is posted here for the readers of OhMyMedia.

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