China probes Baidu, Youku Tudou websites over violent shows: Xinhua

A logo of Baidu is seen at the top of a building under construction in Wuhan, Hubei province, on Aug 31, 2012. Chinese censors are investigating 52 websites owned by companies including top search engine Baidu and online video business Youku Tud
A logo of Baidu is seen at the top of a building under construction in Wuhan, Hubei province, on Aug 31, 2012. Chinese censors are investigating 52 websites owned by companies including top search engine Baidu and online video business Youku Tudou over the distribution of violent and pornographic content, the official Xinhua news agency said on Thursday, June 05, 2014. -- PHOTO: REUTERS

SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Chinese censors are investigating 52 websites owned by companies including top search engine Baidu and online video business Youku Tudou over the distribution of violent and pornographic content, the official Xinhua news agency said on Thursday.

The investigation comes as the Chinese authorities tighten their control over the Internet. In April, China's national anti-pornography office stripped Sina Corp of some online publication licences as part of the crackdown. .

The latest websites under investigation, which include a web portal owned by Chinese Internet company NetEase, are suspected of distributing shows such as cartoon series Grimm's Fairy Tales that contain violent and obscene content, Xinhua said, without citing sources.

The news agency said the websites could face criminal and civil penalties if convicted by China's State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television (SAPPRFT), but gave no further details.

In April, SAPPRFT hit Internet video sites with rare takedown notices for popular United States TV shows such as The Big Bang Theory and NCIS without a clear reason. Such shows are not known to contain controversial sexual or political content.

Xinhua said that the investigation into the 52 websites was part of China's campaign to clean up the Internet. To date, Chinese press and publication regulators have banned 122 online publications and punished 93 websites, the news agency said.

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