China's webcast industry may usher in new regulations
The Wall Street Journal quoted sources as saying that Chinese regulators are drafting new regulations to set a daily limit of 10,000 yuan on fan reward earnings for network anchors, and are considering implementing stricter content censorship on webcasts. People familiar with the matter say regulators are concerned that the phenomenon of young people aspiring to become influencers is contrary to values.
Kuaishou Hong Kong stock prices continued to decline, erasing an 8% intraday increase.
$KUAISHOU-W(01024.HK$ $DouYu(DOYU.US$ $HUYA Inc(HUYA.US$
Kuaishou Hong Kong stock prices continued to decline, erasing an 8% intraday increase.
$KUAISHOU-W(01024.HK$ $DouYu(DOYU.US$ $HUYA Inc(HUYA.US$
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101851523 : This is not good news for the industry
70120100 : The country clearly wants to direct capital to the real estate and financial industries
70120100 70120100: to increase the heavy fiscal revenue of local governments. Officials who are really responsible don't do what they are supposed to do, keep their own hands, and are afraid of taking responsibility. Recruiting any auxiliary police or urban management, isn't this increasing the financial burden on the government?
70120100 70120100: Going back to the issue of values, is there anything more serious than the social stability caused by youth (note youth) unemployment? Coupled with the preference for resource cities, what about 500 million young people in rural areas? Compared to 10 years ago, the central government's fight against corruption only focuses on the provincial, municipal, and ministerial levels, making corruption more hidden, more grassroots, more corrupt cities, and making the rural employment situation more serious.
zhenghoulong 70120100: Just tell the truth