Chinese Government Celebrates Massive Removal of 'Pornographic, Harmful' Online Content

Chinese Government Celebrates Massive Removal of 'Pornographic, Harmful' Online Content

BEIJING — China’s main censorship agency, the National Office Against Pornographic and Illegal Publications, released a statement today announcing the removal of over 8 million “pieces of pornographic and other harmful material” during the first half of 2020.

According to the agency’s announcement, 12,000 websites were removed under the umbrella terms “pornography and harmful content,” which can include various non-sexually-related categories.

Platforms where some of this “pornographic and harmful” material were removed included big local tech companies like the Youku and iQiyi video streaming sites, forum Baidu Tieba and even Douyin, the original version of TikTok.

The censorship operation, dubbed Net Net 2020 was hailed in the announcement put out today by the Service Center of China’s Central Propaganda Department.

According to the announcement, “the anti-crime department severely cracked down on obscene pornography and vulgar information, and carried out special rectification in the fields of live webcasts, short videos, social groups [and] online literature.”

Also caught in the operation was the app and website Love Academy, censored for spreading “PUA [Pick-Up Artist] and other unhealthy information” to Chinese men.

'Cultural Garbage'

The statement includes a quote from an agency spokesperson explaining that the goal of Net Net 2020 was “to crack down on obscene and pornographic information, and resolutely remove cultural garbage, [protect] young people's physical and mental health, earnestly safeguard the cultural rights of the people and effectively build a good network order and clear network space.”

As XBIZ previously reported, last month the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) announced it has decided to “punish” 10 livestreaming platforms for "chaotic content,” including “pornography,” “revealing clothing on female cam stars” and "vulgar hot dances.”

Prominent Chinese platforms like Bilibili and iXigua (owned by TikTok’s parent company ByteDance) “have been reprimanded and ordered to suspend new user registration and overhaul their feeds,” according to Agence France-Presse’s China bureau.

“The 10 platforms are required to ‘rectify’ their content and add the most egregious live-streaming offenders to a cross-platform blacklist,” AFP reported.

Platforms in the U.S. are currently shielded from similar government-led attacks for third-party content by Section 230 of the Communications Act, though both 2020 presidential candidates have asked for the repeal of the so-called "First Amendment of the internet."

Copyright © 2025 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More News

Proposed New Hampshire AV Bill Appears to Violate Constitution

A bill in the New Hampshire state legislature, aimed at requiring adult sites to age-verify users in that state, contains a provision that seemingly contradicts the Supremacy Clause in Article VI of the U.S. Constitution.

AEBN Publishes Report on Fetish Trends

AEBN has published a report on fetish categories from its straight and gay theaters.

Online Child Protection Hearing to Include Federal AV Bill

A House subcommittee will hold a hearing next week on a slate of bills aimed at protecting minors online, including the SCREEN Act, which would make site-based age verification of users seeking to access adult content federal law.

Industry Photographer, 'Payout' Founder Mike B Passes Away

Longtime industry photographer and publisher Michael Bartholomey, known widely as Mike B, passed away Saturday.

FSC Announces 2025 Board of Directors Election Nominees

The Free Speech Coalition (FSC) has announced the nominees for its 2025 Board of Directors election.

AdultHTML Launches Black Friday Web Design, Development Promo

AdultHTML has launched its annual Black Friday/Cyber Monday promo for web design and development, running through Dec. 5.

Canada Exempts Online Adult Content From 'CanCon' Quotas

The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) has updated its broadcasting regulatory policies, exempting streaming adult content from “made in Canada” requirements that apply to other online material.

Creator Law Firm 'OnlyFirm' Launches

Entertainment attorney Alex Lonstein has officially launched OnlyFirm.com for creators.

German Court Puts Pornhub, YouPorn 'Network Ban' on Hold

The Administrative Court of Düsseldorf has temporarily blocked the State Media Authority of North Rhine-Westphalia (LfM) from forcing telecom providers to cut off access to Aylo-owned adult sites Pornhub and YouPorn.

FSC: NC Law Invalidating Model Contracts Takes Effect December 1

The Free Speech Coalition (FSC) has issued a notice that North Carolina's Prevent Exploitation of Women and Minors Act goes into effect on December 1.

Show More