Ng Han Guan/Associated Press |
China’s top broadcast regulator is tightening
oversight of Internet TV, in what analysts see as the latest step for
greater control of online media.
The State Administration of
Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television has instructed Internet
TV providers to remove any foreign television shows, “microfilms” and
online-only programming they are not authorized to broadcast, The
Beijing News reported
on Wednesday. The state regulator has given Internet TV providers until
Monday to comply or face having their licenses revoked, the news
magazine Caixin reported
on Thursday. Internet TV providers must hold two licenses issued by the
regulator in order to operate: an integrated broadcasting license and a
content service license.
Officials for the state
regulator have held two meetings with representatives of the country’s
seven major Internet TV providers over the past two weeks to discuss the
instructions, Zhang Yanxiang, chief executive of the Internet TV
information website LMTW.com, said in an interview.
Mr. Zhang said that this
means that Internet TV providers will not be able to pass on content
from the popular streaming websites Sohu TV and Youku, because those
websites do not have a license to broadcast their programs on television
screens. It also means that people who purchased set-top boxes in order
to watch Sohu TV exclusives such as the American series “House of
Cards” on their televisions would be out of luck.
For Chinese consumers, the
growth of the online video industry in recent years has made available a
far wider selection of domestic and foreign programming. American shows
like “The Big Bang Theory” and British shows like “Sherlock” have
gained avid followings among Chinese viewers, attracted both by their
content and on-demand nature.
LeTV, a popular Chinese
online video streaming website, introduced its first set-top box in 2010
and gives subscribers access to all of the website’s licensed content,
which includes foreign television series like “Homeland” and
“Community.” The Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, which is preparing
for an initial public offering on the New York Stock Exchange, has its
own Internet television set-top box and recently announced a deal with Lions Gate Entertainment to stream popular shows like “Mad Men.”
One concern of government
regulators is “information security,” Mr. Zhang said. Connecting
televisions to the Internet, he said, can allow unsanctioned material to
be seen on television screens and provide new opportunities for hackers
to communicate their messages directly to viewers.
Read the whole story, please go to The New York Time.
1 comment:
The banned can not be seen on TV. But a proper digital aerial installation provides you the best version of watching experience. Wrongly connected aerial will cause the disconnection many times and will be boring to watch your show. SO you need to make sure of proper installation.
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