BEIJING, Feb. 19 (Xinhua) -- Netizens from about 40
websites have said they will not look at or pass on the hundreds of pornographic
star photos which began circulating on the Internet during the Spring Festival
and which have been dubbed Pornogate.
"Recently some racy photos of a Hong Kong singer-actor together with several actresses spread
quickly on the Internet. They were viewed and downloaded by many netizens; they
are beyond the acceptable limits of morality," read a declaration on the portal
website Sohu.com.
"Hereby we call on each responsible netizen to 'end
Pornogate' by deleting those photos, not downloading and not forwarding, so as
to create a healthy online environment for children," said the declaration.
Dozens of other websites including Sina.com,
Baidu.com, QQ.com, mediachina.net posted similar declarations. On Sina alone,
about 2,000 netizens supported a posting from a netizen nicknamed Sanxia.
The Public Security Ministry launched a campaign from
this January to September to clear porn from the Internet.
The Internet News and Information Review Council in
Beijing on Monday asked China's major search website Baidu.com to make a public
apology for its delayed reaction in blocking access to the photos.
"'Key-words searching' and 'Tieba', a picture-sharing
section of Baidu.com, became a platform to show and spread the obscene pictures
and Baidu failed to block the photos after other Beijing-based websites had
taken actions against the pictures' spreading," said a statement issued by the
council. One posting on the Tieba section of the Baidu website had attracted
more than 500,000 clicks.
The incident aroused media frenzy from the end of
January onwards, when the sex photos of Canadian-born rap singer and actor
Edison Chen and starlet Gillian Chung were allegedly stolen from a faulty
computer. They then spread rapidly on the Internet.
More celebrities were soon dragged into the scandal,
including actress Cecilia Cheung, Hollywood actress Maggie Q and former actress
Bobo Chan.
Hong Kong police made high-profile arrests of at
least six suspects.
Edison Chen apologized in a video statement on Feb.
4, followed by Gillian Chung on Feb. 11, admitting that she had been "very naive
and very silly".
The efforts, however, didn't seem to bring an end to
the scandal.
Some people showed tolerance to the spreading the
photos. "Such photos would be spread wherever they appear in the world. They
could shoot the photos, why couldn't we spread them," said a netizen nicknamed
Little Shrimp.
But Li Yinhe, a renowned sociologist and a researcher
with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, expressed her worry. "Many people
nowadays have the hobby of prying into others' privacy. We need to reflect on
such vulgar and unhealthy interests."
China has the second largest population of internet
users in the world -- 210 million by the end of 2007, among whom those aged
between 18 and 24 accounted for 31.8 percent of the total and the group from 25
to 30 made up 18.1 percent.
A survey by the Shanghai University showed that 85
percent of the more than 100 primary school teachers polled and 73.4 percent of
the 200 parents expressed anxiety about porn and violence on the Internet, but
56.8 percent of the teachers and 29.2 percent of the parents felt helpless in
tackling the problem.
When "too obscene, too violent" has become the first
catch phrase in the year 2008 in China, "the Pornogate scandal rings a warning
bell for the Internet supervision department to beef up supervision," said a
commentary on the southcn.com, "eliminating the obscene pictures is just the
first step, and it will take a long time to create a healthy and harmonious
online environment."
An official with the Beijing Qingdian Wanwei
Telecommunication and Technology Co., Ltd was nabbed on Monday with three of his
underling for uploading 28 obscene pictures last year, with a click rate of
250,000, according to a report of the Beijing Youth Daily.
"Because of the high click rate, they are likely to
face more than ten years' jail," said the report.
The incident was also seen as a lesson for star-crazy
youngsters.
Sports column writer Dong Lu posted an article on his
blog, saying that "what fans of the stars should do is to smash their computers
and common people, the idols".
"Thanks to Edison Chen and the scandal, although some
actresses were hurt, they gave the society a valuable lesson...the fans should
wake up and live their own lives."
His view was shared by a netizen nicknamed
Haikuotiankong. "We should take this opportunity to educate our young people to
see the stars in a correct way rather than deify and worship them blindly," he
said. "those who died in the battle against snow disaster are our real
idols."