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China

New China Law Fines Influencers If They Discuss 'Serious' Topics Without a Degree (iol.co.za) 74

schwit1 shares a report from IOL: China has enacted a new law regulating social media influencers, requiring them to hold verified professional qualifications before posting content on sensitive topics such as medicine, law, education, and finance, IOL reported. The new law went into effect on Saturday. The regulation was introduced by the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) as part of its broader effort to curb misinformation online.

Under the new rules, influencers must prove their expertise through recognized degrees, certifications, or licenses before discussing regulated subjects. Major platforms such as Douyin (China's TikTok), Bilibili, and Weibo are now responsible for verifying influencer credentials and ensuring that content includes clear citations, disclaimers, and transparency about sources.
A separate report notes that if influencers are caught talking about the "serious" topics, they will face a fine of up to 100,000 yuan ($14,000).

New China Law Fines Influencers If They Discuss 'Serious' Topics Without a Degree

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  • will dr pepper be banned? can't have that useing the DR name tag.

  • I feel liked I'm being duped here.

  • Misinformation is the bane of the internet age and has put us in a less than optimal situation.
    • Fox News appeared before smart phones. It's just that so many US people agreed with the fear-mongering and 'world owes me/billionaires' delusion. A recent quote reveals the phenomenon: "Two types of people support Trump: Billionaires and idiots, so check your bank-balance." Book-banning and enforcing religion-based laws is an obvious symptom of the quest for power over others. Anti-vax conspiracy theories and demanding everyone copy their delusions, is the latest step in the power-grab.

      Plus, some pe

    • Imagine being fined for a political opinion because you don't have a degree political science... how could anyone thing this is good?
    • If you go back to Dionysodorus in Socratic dialogues, will you find that misinformation was real popular in classical Athens, too?

    • You aren't looking at a system for controlling misinformation, it's a system for controlling information. "You can't speak on this unless we decide to qualify you." It shouldn't be difficult to see how that is immediately corrupted.
  • by robi5 ( 1261542 ) on Wednesday October 29, 2025 @08:56PM (#65760250)

    Posting an article on Slashdot should also require a degree.
    People have difficulty reading, leading to double posts like this one.
    TFA was posted on Slashdot already, within 24 hours:
    https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Ftech.slashdot.org%2Fstor... [slashdot.org]

  • by BoogieChile ( 517082 ) on Wednesday October 29, 2025 @09:07PM (#65760268)

    > Think back to the Covid-19 pandemic fake cures, antivax rhetoric, and pseudoscience spread like wildfire, often amplified by influencers with millions of followers but no medical background.

    Or, indeed, last Tuesday -> https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.whitehouse.gov%2Fart... [whitehouse.gov]

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      There's the problem. If that law existed here, you know RFK and Trump would be immune.

      • Immune from the law but not immunized against pathogens.
      • by N1AK ( 864906 )
        And you can bet they wouldn't certify anyone who disagreed with them as an expert...
        • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

          And you can bet they wouldn't certify anyone who disagreed with them as an expert...

          You can find experts to espouse any view.

          Heck, remember Surgeon General of Florida (who is a doctor) doesn't recommend vaccines. And there are plenty of scientists that deny climate change is happening.

          And let's not forget the person who started the whole "vaccines cause autism" thing was a doctor.

          So as much as the law might do something, I doubt it will do anything. It might just stop people parroting stuff, but qualified

    • by kenh ( 9056 )

      Your link includes citations from Harvard, mt Sinai, and Johns Hopkins - I thought those were real experts, with credentialed medical experts in peer reviewed journals - what exactly is the issue?

      What a similar law would restrict is prevent politicians from acting like climate experts and it would protect dr fauci when he invents things like the 6 foot social distance based on nothing - but, he's a doctor, so, an expert!

    • by Rujiel ( 1632063 )
      I guess today's headlines just needed a double dose of anti-china scaremongering, since the original story is not even off of the first page yet.
  • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Wednesday October 29, 2025 @10:30PM (#65760382)

    They have no equivalent to our First Amendment. And so they restrict speech for people not deemed to be educated or certified on certain topics. Not really a bad idea, until it runs into one's right to speak. We do have restrictions on some types of commercial speech to protect the public from false "experts". We can't shut them up. But we can restrict their ability to offer services for hire in many areas. Medical, legal, engineering, investment, etc. You can say what you want in these areas. But you can't hire your expertise out unless you are certified by the authority having jurisdiction over that profession.

    Problem: Influencers have a different economic model than your traditional domain expert. They are paid by third parties, based on the traffic that they attract. But not the people who may be depending on their expertise. So our licensing system falls flat when the "expert speech for pay" is bypassed. It would take us some real legislative wrangling to bring this under control without a big fight over First Amendment issues. But the Chinese just say, "You make a living as an expert. You had better actually BE an expert."

    • This is mostly a good post, thanks for posting.

        Where it falls flat is your assertion that "influencers" are some kind of experts. I disagree. They're just entertainers. In court, I think they make that argument and easily win any cases you're trying to make by claiming they're purporting to be experts.

      I may be wrong. That happens sometimes. It from what I can see, they're just entertainers.

      • by N1AK ( 864906 )
        There absolutely are influencers who are providing mdeical, financial etc advice and I haven't seen any case law to support the idea that you can give advice as an influencer and use being an 'entertainer' as a defence. There have been cases in the UK where people giving financial advice on social media have been fined for it.
        • by kenh ( 9056 )

          Uh, I wouldn't look to the UK for free speech guidance, you have been arresting folks for social media posts for a while.

        • Any "influencer" shilling for protein powder or "wellness" products is, in a way, providing medical advice. "These products will make you healthier". Any influencer who advertises gold or crypto could be said to be providing financial advice. Where is the line?
        • All bets are off for the UK. Nothing I say is intended to be read in, replied upon or accurate for the UK.

    • by sinij ( 911942 )

      Problem: Influencers have a different economic model than your traditional domain expert. They are paid by third parties, based on the traffic that they attract. But not the people who may be depending on their expertise. So our licensing system falls flat when the "expert speech for pay" is bypassed. It would take us some real legislative wrangling to bring this under control without a big fight over First Amendment issues.

      Deriving profit from generating outrage is absolutely a problem. One possible solution is to expand definition of libel to encompass subjects of broad interest, where public statements have to meet "reckless and intentional disregard for truth" standard. Then have federal prosecutors pick cases and prosecute them in civil courts. Even that is very dangerous, as it will inevitably lead to political prosecutions, where process is the punishment.

      But the Chinese just say, "You make a living as an expert. You had better actually BE an expert."

      No, the Chinese say: "We decide who is an expert, so we now also

      • by topnob ( 1195249 )
        Government bodies decide who is an expert across the world. It's not a huge step to say you shouldn't talk unless you are an expert. And before you say that the government has no control in that, they most certainly do, either by hiring/firing leaders of that field or through the judicial system. It's why some countries ban elected officials from interfering, but these days they seem to ignore that.
  • These people have much to lose and will carefully toe our line on these serious topics.

  • Sounds like they're targeting Bitcoin again.

"Only the hypocrite is really rotten to the core." -- Hannah Arendt.

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