China managed to surpass the
United States as of this year, when its Internet population reached 221 million
users, as the Ministry of Industry and Information revealed. The findings show that despite China’s Internet policy, which limits access to certain content, the online population is growing every year.
Last year’s measurements found
China 5 million users-short compared to the United States, the China Internet
Network Information Center (CNNIC) reported at the time, according to the Xinhua news agency.
At the end of 2007, the proportion was 16 percent compared with 19.1 percent of
the world average (by comparison, 71 percent of the U.S. population uses
Internet).
“Despite a rapidly increasing
Internet population, the proportion of Internet users among the total
population was still lower than the global average level,” the Ministry said,
as quoted by the Xinhua news agency.
China’s Internet population made
a remarkable progress in the past few years: in 2006, there were 137 million
Internet users in the country. In 2007, the population grew by 53 percent, and
the numbers continue to increase.
Last year, CNNIC revealed that
the China’s most popular Internet application is online music (181 million
users or 86.6 percent), closely followed by Instant messaging (170 million
users or 81 percent). Video (76.9 percent), news (73.6 percent) and searches (72.4
percent) have also ranked high in the list of favorite use of the Internet in
China.
Chinese users have had to deal
with the censorship for some time now, as the Chinese government has initiated
a campaign to put a stop to the threat to social stability the uncontrolled
Internet access poses. The “cleaning campaign” includes banning all messages,
whether text, audio or video, sexually suggestive, including ads, as well as
sites that promote violence, religious cults or unveil national secrets.
As of January 31, Chinese
authorities limited the broadcasting of Internet videos to sites ran by the
government, so as to avoid any content that could alter the minds of Internet
users. In their vision, the Internet audio and video providers “must be resolute
in the service of the socialist ideal and of the people.”
While some see censorship as a
necessary measure for the Chinese Internet viewers, foreign analysts consider
it to restrain freedom of speech and to give a hard time to foreign companies,
which may lead to a certain degree of economic instability, as no one knows
exactly what to expect and how they will be able to comply with the government’s
demands.