Slashdot Mirror


New Chinese Rule Requires Real Names Online

crimeandpunishment writes "According to a human rights group, a leading Chinese Internet regulator is calling for new rules requiring people to use their real names online and when buying mobile phones. New York-based 'Human Rights in China' says it has obtained the complete text of a speech Wang Chen, director of the State Council Information Office, made in April, and they quote him as saying 'We will make the Internet real name system a reality as soon as possible.'"

4 of 193 comments (clear)

  1. Not actually done, just a proposal by Meshach · · Score: 4, Informative
    From TFA:

    A leading Chinese Internet regulator has vowed to reduce anonymity in China's portion of cyberspace, calling for new rules to require people to use their real names when buying a mobile phone or going online, according to a human rights group

    It looks like some people want that to be the law, not that it is the law.

    --
    "Maybe this world is another planet's hell"
    Aldous Huxley
  2. Re:Why do you need to be anonymous at all? by inviolet · · Score: 5, Informative

    Although I never agreed with totality control, from sometime ago to this date, I started to change my mind about anonymous everything. I really started to suspect that the most interested parties are criminals. Well, as Google said, if you don't have anything to hide, why are you so afraid of not being anonymous at all? I can't see the point.

    Because sometimes, society is mistaken about what it considers to be wrong. In that situation, which in my opinion is very very common, privacy allows you to act morally.

    Recent examples come to mind:

    • Be a Catholic in England
    • Be a Protestant in England
    • Be an atheist in many countries
    • Spank your kids
    • Teach your kids evolution
    • Be gay
    • Be Jewish in Mexico or Germany
    • Discuss any of that stuff on the internet
    --
    FATMOUSE + YOU = FATMOUSE
  3. Re:Why do you need to be anonymous at all? by NetSettler · · Score: 4, Informative
    • It may also be necessary for the personal safety of people who are being stalked, doing whistleblowing, or even just dating and wanting to chat without committing.
    • It can be necessary to express any unpopular political opinion. Note that popular opinions require no protection but that if we assume that what's popular never changes we can just have one vote and then be done and never vote again. All political change begins as a minority viewpoint. For example, labor organization is more easily suppressed if one can keep the organization from ever happening. The movement to stop a war might start small.
    • For some public figures, it allows the freedom to relax and speak without having their political motives challenged or their well-known credentials inappropriately applied since their voice is not as loud as when it is their well-known self, and since anonymous speech is evaluated for the worth of the statement rather than for who said it.
    • It allows the underappreciated option of having an opinion you might later want to change without being quoted for life.
    • It allows one to perform an act like shopping without having marketers of the future be able to log the action as a sign of potential interest.
    • On juries (and in paper review for refereed scientific and technical journals, for that matter), anonymous voting is considered a way of encouraging frankness and honesty.
    • In voting for politicians and political initiatives, it is considered a way to assure that votes are hard to buy or force because compliance with an improper promise or attempted coercion is not possible to track.
    • Certain people will not approach a help desk for things like medical care, contemplating suicide, or other issues if they don't believe it's anonymous.
    • Some people are just shy and prefer to speak anonymously.
    • Some religions teach that it's more humble to contribute money, time, energy, etc.) anonymously, not drawing attention to self.
    --

    Kent M Pitman
    Philosopher, Technologist, Writer

  4. Re:It's being done in the US too by Amarantine · · Score: 3, Informative

    Yes, to prevent the guy in front of you from buying all the iPads and reselling them on eBay for 200%. If Apple didn't do this, you'd be complaining that they made it impossible to buy an iPad because eBay-traders would buy them all. Apple can never do things right. Oh, and this policy has been lifted, now the initial demand has levelled off and availability is no longer a problem.