[ny times] The Chinese government on Wednesday began to require cellphone users to furnish identification when buying SIM cards, a move officials cast as an effort to rein in burgeoning cellphone spam, pornography and fraud schemes.
The requirement, which has been in the works for years, is not unlike rules in many developed nations that ask users to present credit card data or other proof of identification to buy cellphone numbers. The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology said that about 40 percent of China’s 800 million cellphone users were currently unidentified. Those users will be ordered to furnish identification by 2013 or lose their service, according to The Global Times, a state-run newspaper.
A government center that deals with cellphone complaints said that the average Chinese cellphone user received a dozen spam messages a week, and that three of every four users received messages that involved fraud, China Daily, another state newspaper, reported Wednesday.
Some analysts, however, questioned whether the new requirement would substantially reduce illicit messages. Instead, they warned that the regulation potentially gives the government new tools to locate and punish individuals who send cellphone messages that censors deem unacceptable.
The Chinese central government has steadily tightened its censorship of the Internet and wireless communications since 2008, blocking increasing numbers of Web sites, social networking services like Facebook and Twitter and, most recently, shutting down microblogs that it regards as subversive.
China Will Require ID for Cellphone Numbers; Noncompliance Means No Service
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