The local government in Xuzhou, Jiangsu province has just passed what looks like a wide-reaching law making it illegal for people to publish someone else's 'private information' on the Internet. Offenders can be fined up to 5,000 yuan and could be barred from using the Internet for half a year! The news comes one month after a district housing bureau chief in Nanjing was dismissed after netizens posted photos of him wearing a RMB100,000 watch and smoking a RMB150 a pack cigarettes. The pictures spread like wildfire on the web because those items were seen to be beyond the means of someone living on a civil servant's modest wages.



No doubt China is serious about cracking down on corruption.
hmmm interesting that the steps taken to prevent exposing a corrupt official is to target the "exposure" rather than to target the "corruption"
Heheh, yeah, love that too. Makes perfect sense.
So much for the Hu's hard hitting accountability system. Oh well, as long as the fox guards the chickens...
(interesting ad links here for a "Made in Jiangsu" website)
nope... nothing to hide there.
This is way off topic, but I have always wondered why Jingjing is standing on a showerhead.
This one is Chacha, not Jingjing! Get your internet police right please! :P
I thought it was a manhole cover.
This one is Chacha, not Jingjing! Get your internet police right please! :P
My apologies. I guess I need some reeducation through labor to correct my thinking.
I bet Cha Cha likes caucasian avatars.