In an apparent bid to compete with the central government, the Taipei City Government yesterday proposed a draft law for the management of Internet cafes.
The draft, which was proposed by the Department of Reconstruction (建設局) to the City Council's Finance and Construction Committee yesterday morning, is scheduled to be sent to the council in late June for further review and approval.
Taipei's regulations would allow Internet cafes to be set up only in the city's commercial districts and prohit it from being set up in the vicinity of schools.
Minors under the age of 15 would not be allowed to enter such a facility unless accompanied by their parents or legal guardians.
Those under the age of 18 would be prohibited from viewing pornography and and playing violent computer games.
Violators, including both Internet cafe owners and users, would face fines of between NT$50,000 and NT$100,000.
Speaking of the coincidence that both the central and municipal governments announced methods for dealing with the long-debated issue at the same time, KMT City Councilor Wu Shih-cheng (
"We've been asking the central government to take care of the problem but it has simply ignored our requests. When we realized the seriousness of the problem and started to take action, it began to do something as it was afraid of being outrun by us," he said.
According to the draft, information-recreation service providers would be barred from offering gambling services and access to pornography.
Violators would face fines of up to NT$100,000 on top of a jail sentence of between one and six months.
Internet cafe owners would also face fines of between NT$20,000 and NT$60,000 if they allowed those under the age of 18 to enter their facilities between 8am and 6pm on weekdays and between 10pm and 8am at night.
Finally, owners would face fines of up to NT$50,000 if they fail to keep week-long records of the Web sites their patrons browsed or downloaded from.
They would also face fines of between NT$10,000 and NT$30,000 if such records indicated that customers had visited Web sites containing pornography or material related to gambling.
CROSS-STRAIT COLLABORATION: The new KMT chairwoman expressed interest in meeting the Chinese president from the start, but she’ll have to pay to get in Beijing allegedly agreed to let Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Chairwoman Cheng Li-wun (鄭麗文) meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) around the Lunar New Year holiday next year on three conditions, including that the KMT block Taiwan’s arms purchases, a source said yesterday. Cheng has expressed interest in meeting Xi since she won the KMT’s chairmanship election in October. A source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said a consensus on a meeting was allegedly reached after two KMT vice chairmen visited China’s Taiwan Affairs Office Director Song Tao (宋濤) in China last month. Beijing allegedly gave the KMT three conditions it had to
STAYING ALERT: China this week deployed its largest maritime show of force to date in the region, prompting concern in Taipei and Tokyo, which Beijing has brushed off Deterring conflict over Taiwan is a priority, the White House said in its National Security Strategy published yesterday, which also called on Japan and South Korea to increase their defense spending to help protect the first island chain. Taiwan is strategically positioned between Northeast and Southeast Asia, and provides direct access to the second island chain, with one-third of global shipping passing through the South China Sea, the report said. Given the implications for the US economy, along with Taiwan’s dominance in semiconductors, “deterring a conflict over Taiwan, ideally by preserving military overmatch, is a priority,” it said. However, the strategy also reiterated
‘BALANCE OF POWER’: Hegseth said that the US did not want to ‘strangle’ China, but to ensure that none of Washington’s allies would be vulnerable to military aggression Washington has no intention of changing the “status quo” in the Taiwan Strait, US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth said on Saturday, adding that one of the US military’s main priorities is to deter China “through strength, not through confrontation.” Speaking at the annual Reagan National Defense Forum in Simi Valley, California, Hegseth outlined the US Department of Defense’s priorities under US President Donald Trump. “First, defending the US homeland and our hemisphere. Second, deterring China through strength, not confrontation. Third, increased burden sharing for us, allies and partners. And fourth, supercharging the US defense industrial base,” he said. US-China relations under
The Chien Feng IV (勁蜂, Mighty Hornet) loitering munition is on track to enter flight tests next month in connection with potential adoption by Taiwanese and US armed forces, a government source said yesterday. The kamikaze drone, which boasts a range of 1,000km, debuted at the Taipei Aerospace and Defense Technology Exhibition in September, the official said on condition of anonymity. The Chungshan Institute of Science and Technology and US-based Kratos Defense jointly developed the platform by leveraging the engine and airframe of the latter’s MQM-178 Firejet target drone, they said. The uncrewed aerial vehicle is designed to utilize an artificial intelligence computer