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ĦĦBEIJING, June 18 (Xinhuanet) -- Chinese websites, Internet Service Providers (ISPs) and other Internet-related organizations across the country are being invited to sign a self-discipline pact designed to protect online intellectual property rights as well asprevent cyber crime, the spread of
harmful information and unhealthy competition.
The pact, containing four chapters and 31 articles,
is initiated and implemented by the Beijing-based China Internet Association, a
national self-governing body for the country's Internet sector.
The pledge stresses the establishment of a
self-disciplinary mechanism aimed to advance the healthy and orderly development
of the Internet industry in China.
The basic principles of self-discipline for the
Internet industry are patriotism, observance of the law, fairness and
trustworthiness, according to the pact.
The pledge encourages lawful, fair and orderly
competition and values the protection of intellectual property, network security
and the elimination of deleterious information from the Internet.
Those Internet information providers should not issue
or spreadinformation threatening the national security, social stability
orcontaining superstitious or erotic content, according to the pact.
Those websites containing deleterious information
should not belinked, and the information inflow from other domestic and overseas
websites should be examined and supervised by relevant organizations, according
to the pact.
Effective measures should be taken to create a good
environmentfor juvenile Internet surfers, and Internet bars should direct
surfers, especially young surfers, to have access to healthy online information.
Any online information products should not contain
contents violating others' intellectual property rights, according to the pact.
The Internet industry should make joint efforts to
oppose online virus spread and take relevant precautions, according to the pact,
encouraging enterprises and individuals to develop software and hardware
products with their own intellectual property rights.
The pact also calls for active participation of
international cooperation and exchanges in this regard, as well as observance
ofinternational agreements signed by China.
China has promulgated a series of laws and
governmental regulations relating to the management of the Internet, such as the
decision on safeguarding Internet security enacted by the Standing Committee of
the National People's Congress, China's legislature. Enditem |