UPDATE 1-China bureaucratic war over online Warcraft heats up
By Chris Buckley and Melanie Lee
BEIJING, Nov 4 (Reuters) - China's Culture Ministry has accused the publishing watchdog of abusing its authority by threatening access to the popular online game, World of Warcraft, stoking bureaucratic rivalry over control of the Internet.
The ministry scolded the General Administration of Press and Publication (GAPP), which had told Chinese online game firm NetEase.com (NTES.O) not to operate the latest version of Activision Blizzard's (ATVI.O) World of Warcraft, the Chinese-language Economic Information Daily said on Wednesday.
NetEase has said it is examining the demand.
The rare public turf war between the two agencies has exposed the tricky regulatory undergrowth that Internet companies must navigate in China.
"This just highlights the overall risks of investing in China, given that the Internet is a new industry and China itself is an emerging economy," said Dick Wei, an analyst with JP Morgan in Hong Kong.
China's Communist Party leadership has demanded tighter control over the Internet and online gaming, worried about images and words it sees as pornographic, unhealthy or subversive.
Government agencies have in turn been eager to enforce those demands, and competed to stake out control of the potentially lucrative and prestigious sector, and reap the regulatory fees.
"The Ministry of Culture believes the notice from the General Administration of Press and Publication does not conform to the relevant regulations, and clearly oversteps its authority," said Li Xiong, a Ministry of Culture (MOC) official in charge of market affairs, according to the Economic Information Daily.
"As long as they're online, these online games and publications are fully subject to administration by the MOC," he said, according to the China Daily.
Li said the Communist Party propaganda department, which controls cultural life, had in March given the Culture Ministry control over online games, according to the Chinese-language International Finance News.
Li's unyielding comments suggested the bureaucratic war over Warcraft, a role-playing game in which subscribers complete quests, slay monsters and fight each other, may not end quickly.
Access in China to the game has not yet been affected for those who have already paid for a subscription.
Gamers at an Internet cafe in Beijing said they yearned for the power tussle to end. If access to the game were blocked, gamers said they would consider moving to servers outside China, shelling out the extra expense of a new subscription.
"The only thing I want to say is I'm grieved," said Chen, a man in his mid-twenties who only gave his surname to Reuters.
"Why does such a good game have so many troubles in China when it's running peacefully in other parts of the world?" Continued...




