China's telecom regulator has accused 102 companies of illegal behavior in the country's wireless value-added services industry, the latest step in a renewed campaign to clean up the unruly sector, a Reuters report said.
The report said the regulator did not specify what the illegal practices were, but in the past such campaigns had been directed at controversial content and services such as pornography and gambling, as well as spam.
The list, which was published on the Ministry of Information Industry's Web site (www.mii.gov.cn), included units of software maker Kingsoft and Shanghai Sifang Information Technology, the report said.
"If the companies have not corrected themselves within a set period, they will have their licenses revoked," the MII statement, published in the Web site, said.
The list was published less than two weeks after the nation's top wireless value-added service providers, including Tom Online, Sina, Sohu.com, and Linktone, were informed of new policies designed to clean up the industry.
One analyst predicted the policy changes could see the industry contract by 30% or more.
Among the major changes in the original announcement included the requirement for companies to offer free one-month trials for their services, as well as to verify that consumers actually wanted their services renewed on a regular basis.
The new policies had taken a toll on the stocks of some affected companies, with some analysts predicting their revenue from such services could fall by up to 20%, the report further said.