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China's online population rises to 457 million in 2010

by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Jan 19, 2011
The number of Internet users in China, already the world's largest online market, hit 457 million in 2010 -- up 19.1 percent from the previous year, a government-linked industry body said Wednesday.

The figure marks an increase of 73.3 million users and means more than one-third of the country's 1.3 billion-strong population is now online.

The number of people surfing the web on mobile phones surged nearly 30 percent last year to 303 million, figures released by the state-backed China Internet Network Information Center.

China's spiralling online population has turned the Internet into a forum for citizens to express their opinions in a way rarely seen in a country where the traditional media is under strict government control.

The Internet has also become a lucrative marketplace. The value of online sales rose 22 percent in last year to 4.5 trillion yuan ($684 billion) as more price-sensitive consumers turned to the web for cheaper products amid rising inflation.

The sales data published by the China e-Business Research Center covers business-to-business, business-to-consumer and consumer-to-consumer transactions.

The growing strength and influence of the web population has prompted concern in Beijing about the Internet's potential as a tool for generating social unrest, and authorities have stepped up surveillance in recent years.

The government blocks web content that it deems politically sensitive in a vast system dubbed the "Great Firewall of China".



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