Nowadays it's fashionable for many Chinese to have a blog to record their
thoughts, favorite things, daily life and even their own private secrets,
garnering instant feedback from friends and strangers.
Writer Han Han and book reviewer Bai Ye
criticized each other harshly in their respective blogs.
[sina] |
"Do you host a blog?" has become a
common question when urban Chinese people meet.
Statistics show that blogging is rapidly moving from the margins to the
mainstream of Chinese society, from an avant-garde demeanor to something in
style.
In 2005, the number of blogs worldwide exceeded 100 million, with 16 million
in China. It is expected that the figure in China will reach 60 million at the
end of 2006.
At the end of 2005, China's leading Internet portal Sina made a name for
itself by inviting celebrities to write blogs on its website. Many famous film
directors, writers and scholars began blogging.
The fact that people can say what they want on blogs not only fosters the
development of blogging, but also is causing disputes involving personal
attacks, intellectual property violations, wars of words and the disclosure of
other people's privacies.
Chen Tong, Editor in Chief of Sina.com, expressed his concerns about the
phenomenon at a press conference.
"I am very pleased to see the rapid development of blogging in China.
Meanwhile, I frequently feel panic and nervousness. The rapid development of
blogging should be well regulated, otherwise any little fault may lead it in the
wrong direction,Ħħ he said.
Not long ago, Han Han, a writer who is known for his fictional books, and
book reviewer Bai Ye from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences criticized each
other harshly in their respective blogs.
Later, several film directors, musicians and pundits joined in, turning the
event into an online tempest.
After that incident, topics such as Internet self-discipline and a so-called
"blog pact" began to be discussed in China's online community.
On April 19, Bokee, a leading blog service provider, initiated and signed
with 19 other blog hosting sites, including Hexun, Sina and Sohu, China's first
Blog Self-Discipline Pact.
The pact consists of restraints to be self-imposed by websites hosting blogs,
as well as by bloggers. Both groups are expected to abide by the code of conduct
and display social responsibility.
The pact immediately caused great controversy on the Internet. Does it mean
regulation or control of the development of blogging, which many bloggers view
as an infringement on freedom of speech?
Is it necessary to have such a self-disciplinary pact? Furthermore, is it
necessary to create laws to govern blogs?
In the United States, where blogging was born, the Congress debated a blog
act in November 2005, to put restraints on blogs. In the end, the act was
abandoned.
So far, no country has any laws regarding blogs, though in many instances
existing laws such as ones protecting freedom of expression are applicable.
Meaningless act
Chen Cun (writer): For ordinary people, blogs are a good way for them to
express personal ideas, or to communicate with friends. In this regard, blogging
is a good thing, and a blessing for our times.
However, impacted by the desires of some websites to generate profit through
advertisements, well-known figures in China are being dragged into having a
blog. The public has found it entertaining to watch others, especially
celebrities, vent online through their blogs.
Following the commercial imperative, blog hosting sites don't delete these
quarrelling blogs with the excuse that they are "private diaries."
On the contrary, they add fuel to the fire by trying to get more people to
join the verbal sparring. Blogs should be a place of self-demonstration, but now
they are a place where anyone can enter and curse.
Some people may say that "my blog belongs to me and I can say whatever I want
and no one can interfere with me." They are right in saying that.
But the Internet is a public platform and a public space. You can say
something at home, or among your friends. But when you post it on the Web, it is
open and should be dealt with in accordance with the rules on public affairs.
With today's technology, it is very hard to manage blogs. It is reported that
more than 16 million blogs have been registered in China and the number is
increasing at about 10 every second. The cost is inconceivable for managing the
enormous number of articles, photos, videos and audio products. Who should be
responsible for the cost? Blog service providers can't afford it, as the current
business model is immature.
The blog pact doesn't have any repercussions under the law, or any punitive
measures, and is basically a piece of waste paper. Currently, most blog service
providers encourage provoking behaviors on blogs and even incite disputes
between bloggers.
It is unreliable to regulate blogs only on the basis of business people's
self-discipline and the virtue of netizens. In my opinion, we can borrow from
the implementation of the film rating system and devise corresponding norms to
regulate bloggers' words, deeds and photos under the current legal framework. Of
course, it is not easy to identify the norms.
But some people go too far in their blogs and some even challenge our ethical
code through such things as pornography and verbal abuse. If we do not guide the
development of blogs, the prospects for blogs will be dim.
If public statements cannot be restrained by law, then the platforms that
carry the statements will be in a perilous situation. This is not alarmist talk.
Hong Bo (editor in chief of Donews.com.cn website): This pact does not have
any effect on blogs because each person has his own basic line for what is
appropriate conduct. You can find rule violators everywhere and there is no such
pact worldwide. But foreign companies, in maintaining corporate blogs, have
their own policies. Everyone should have a basic knowledge of what can be
expressed and what cannot.
I don't think it is necessary to enact laws for blogs because any activity on
the web is governed by current laws and it is unnecessary to make new ones.
Wang Xiaoshan (editor at The Beijing News and blogger): Quarreling on the
Internet is just one of the features of blogging. As we are under great social
pressure, we should say things directly and express ourselves freely online. It
is much better than being sick because of pent-up stress, or releasing the anger
in real life and fighting on the streets.
I believe the pact is just a byproduct of the quarrels between Han Han and
Bai Ye. The dispute itself is not worrying. People who think they are right have
a louder voice and those who feel it beneath their dignity to reply just stay
silent.
As Karl Marx said, "You marvel at the delightful diversity, the inexhaustible
riches of nature. You do not ask the rose to smell like a violet; but the
richest of all, the mind, is supposed to exist in only a single manner?"
Han Han (writer and blogger): I will not surrender just because of the pact.
My statements only upset those lacking mental prowess. I'm not breaking any
laws.
Self-discipline important
Da Yu (columnist at eNet, a Chinese IT website): To discuss this issue, we
should first clarify the question of whether blogs are a platform for free
expression or a public medium. If blogs are regarded as a platform for free
expression, then our freedom of speech should be respected. However, if we
regard them as a new public medium, then bloggers should obey related laws.
But the definition of a blog is vague. Actually, most people's blogs, or
blogs with a small number of readers, are more like online diaries. Every word
on such a blog comes from the writer's mind. As for celebrity blogs, blogs on
the first page of a website or blogs with a large number of readers, they have
the function of a public medium.
A vague definition leads to difficulties in handling these different types of
blogs. The blog pact means to reduce the potential negative influence through
the notion of self-discipline.
I think self-discipline is the best way to deal with blogs at the current
stage. As one commentator said, "I believe most bloggers are of high quality and
that offensive words are usually spoken unconsciously. So long as we make more
efforts to stress the awareness of blog writers of acting in a socially
responsible manner, virtual rules will naturally be formed and more bloggers
will raise their writing level."
Viewed from the experiences and results of self-discipline pacts in other
industries, nongovernmental concordats often don't have a strong binding effect.
Similarly, most of the clauses in the blog pact are defined by calling for
better behavior, but offer only weak enforcement mechanisms.
Most people believe the self-discipline of bloggers is more important than
that of blog service providers. But I think just the opposite.
Blogs becoming places of trouble has something to do with what blog hosting
websites have done in order to draw eyeballs. They vigorously promote
controversial content in blogs, such as sex diaries and online quarrels between
celebrities. If such things were not promoted, the current situation of many
people feeling pessimistic toward the development of blogs would not have
happened.
Thus, management of blogs cannot follow the management mode of traditional
media. However, we shouldn't take a laissez-faire attitude. We don't have high
expectations on the blog pact, which calls for self-discipline of both bloggers
and websites hosting blogs. But at the current stage, this is the best and only
available way to regulate blogs.
Finally, I want to point out again that the self-discipline of blog hosting
websites is more important than that of bloggers.
Jiang Meizhi (freelancer): No matter what reason is driving Bokee to propose
a blog pact, we should respect its courage and support its behavior. It is a
good thing that someone is appealing for self-discipline in the complicated
blogosphere, and at least it indicates that some people haven't completely
fallen into this preposterous situation.
Once blog writers can regulate themselves, it will be unnecessary to invite a
third party to regulate the sector, an intervention many people don't want to
see. If we don't control our behavior on the Internet, sooner or later a blog
law will be devised. At that time, the freedom of speech for bloggers would
suffer a devastating blow.
So, while the devising of the Blog Self-Discipline Pact is not perfect, it is
very important, necessary and timely.
Lu Tianming (writer): Our Internet environment indeed needs purification. It
is necessary to have a blog pact, but I am not optimistic about the effect of
the pact because many people lack self-discipline on the Internet.
Guo Zhenghong (lawyer): A website is not an organ of state power and does not
have the right to punish. Netizens have nothing at all to fear. Where does the
binding force of the pact lie? The pact is only a kind of appeal. But still it
is conducive to the Internet morality. Currently, there is a large gap in
China's Internet legislation, as only an administrative regulation is available.
It is far from enough.