On-demand video streaming service Youku is the latest to announce a self-imposed cleanup of its platform, saying it found a number of the movies it provides to be problematic, local media is reporting.

The company said that it is conducting a review and clean up operation targeting movies that deal with the distortion of historical figures, contain gang members as central characters, run counter to approved values, and excessively display the โ€œdark side of human nature.โ€

The move follows a crackdown by the countryโ€™s media regulator, the State Administration of Radio and Television (SARFT), to clean up the internet. The SARFT has been placing increased pressure on technology companies to police the content on the web.

On April 13, Toutiao-backed Huoshan Short Video (็ซๅฑฑๅฐ่ง†้ข‘)  temporarily shut one of its channels after being criticized by the regulator. On the same day, social networking platform Weibo announced plans to remove gay-themed content from its platform, later reversing its decision due to public outcry. It is interesting to note that Huoshan went back online with a new topic on the recommendation site called โ€œHello! New Age (ไฝ ๅฅฝ๏ผๆ–ฐๆ—ถไปฃ)โ€ focusing on โ€œpositive energy content.โ€ Weibo introduced a similar section after itโ€™s trending topics feature was temporarily shut down in February.

Huoshan and Weibo were not the only popular platforms hit by regulators last week. Watermelon Video (่ฅฟ็“œ่ง†้ข‘) barred mobile video uploads, live streams, and live comments, Tencent suspended short video playback within its messaging apps,  Toutiao was instructed to permanently shut its Neihan Duanzi (ๅ†…ๆถตๆฎตๅญ โ€œimplied jokesโ€) app, numerous news services were suspended from Chinese app stores, and Toutiao temporary disabled live streaming and comments in its Douyin (ๆŠ–้Ÿณ) app.

Christopher Udemans is TechNode's former Shanghai-based data and graphics reporter. He covered Chinese artificial intelligence, mobility, cleantech, and cybersecurity.

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