China crackdown on online rumours seen as tactic to silence critics
High-profile bloggers say they have reined in sensitive posts for fear of detention

China’s crackdown on online “rumour-mongering”, widely seen as a tool to halt criticism of the ruling Communist Party, has chilled political discourse, with high-profile bloggers saying they have reined in sensitive posts for fear of detention.
Lawyers and activists called the crackdown a significant, if crude, expansion of powers to police the internet and a blow to those who rely on microblogs to disseminate information that is often not monitored as strictly as traditional media.
“I am really scared now that any whistleblowing might lead to an arrest,” said Zhou Ze, a rights lawyer with more than 165,000 followers on the Twitter-like microblog Sina Weibo. “We all have to talk less, and more carefully.”
It is common for politically sensitive posts to be taken down by censors and for users to be blocked, but recent detentions have sparked fears of harsher punishments.
I am really scared now that any whistleblowing might lead to an arrest
At the heart of the issue is a judicial interpretation by China’s top court that says bloggers can be prosecuted for posting rumours seen by more than 5,000 people, or forwarded more than 500 times.