The number of Internet users in China has surged past 500
million as millions of new Web surfers go online using mobile
phones and tablet computers.
The popularity of the Internet in China has driven the
explosive growth of profitable Web companies and made
fortunes for some Chinese entrepreneurs despite government
controls on what the public can see online.
The number of mainland Internet users rose to 513 million in
December, up 12 percent from a year earlier, the
government-sanctioned China Internet Network Information
Centre said.
Among them, the number who go online using handheld devices
rose 17.5 percent over a year earlier to 356 million.
The popularity of wireless Internet was reflected Friday in a
scramble by Chinese gadget fans and scalpers to buy Apple
Inc.'s latest iPhone 4S, which sold out within hours of its
China launch.
Angry customers shouted and threw eggs at Apple's flagship
Beijing outlet after the company failed to open the store,
citing the size of the crowd. Apple postponed further iPhone
4S sales at its mainland stores for safety reasons but said
they will be sold online and through its local carrier, China
Unicom Ltd.
The communist government encourages Internet use for business
and education but tries to block access to material it deems
pornographic or subversive.
The governnment is strengthening its control over popular
microblogs after a bullet train crash last July that killed
40 people prompted an online outpouring of criticism of the
official response.
Microblog services have been ordered to monitor postings
content more closely and remove objectionable material, while
news media were barred from reporting online material without
firsthand verification.
Despite such controls, popular online services such as
portals Sina.com and Sohu.com, video websites Youku.com and
Tudou.com and search engine Baidu report growing traffic and
revenues.
Outlets owned by the ruling Communist Party or by the
government also have jumped into the market, launching their
own search engines and other services.
Regulators have approved an initial public stock offering by
the online arm of the ruling party newspaper People's
Daily, people.com, on the Shanghai Stock Exchange to
raise 527 million yuan ($US85 million).
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