More Internet police will be deployed to fight increasing online
attacks in the southern Chinese province, Guangdong police said
yesterday.
"Virtual police will appear next month at major websites in
Guangdong to prevent hacking, the spread of viruses and other
online crimes," said Yu Canxian, director of the Internet
supervision department, under the Guangdong Provincial Bureau of
Public Security.
In addition to expanding Internet patrols, online police will
handle reports on Internet crimes from local residents and Internet
surfers, Yu said at a conference in Guangzhou.
Yu urged local residents to report online crimes and create a
better surfing environment in the province, which borders the Hong
Kong and Macao special administrative regions.
Internet hacking and the spread of viruses have risen in
Guangdong recently, Internet supervision deputy director Ning
Huijun said.
Police have also cracked down over the past few months on a
growing number of online criminal cases involving porn websites,
gambling and fraud, he said.
During a month-long campaign earlier this year police erased
more than 8,000 links to pornographic materials, detaining 55
suspects. More than 1 million yuan ($133,000) in cash was
confiscated. Around 6,200 police officers inspected up to 50,000
websites.
Yu urged people to refrain from visiting illegal websites and to
report those they found.
Government departments would work closer together to ensure
regular inspection of websites, he said.
White-collar worker Chen Weihong said police needed to increase
their efforts to fight online crime.
"Otherwise more primary and high school students will become
victims of the online scams and bad websites," she said.
(China Daily September 27, 2007)