The Cyberspace Administration of China said it held a meeting this week with representatives from domestic tech giants Baidu, Sohu, Tencent, Netease and Phoenix to inform them of multiple violations in content published on their platforms.
The offences listed yesterday by the authorities included misinterpreting policy directives, disseminating false information, distorting Chinese Communist Party history, plagiarising photos, and challenging public order.
The companies must "immediately ... Carry out special cleaning and rectification" in order to adhere to regulations, the CAC said in a statement.
Regulations in force since 2000 say websites are responsible for "ensuring the legality of any information" posted on their platforms.
The CAC provided several examples of problems in articles published by independent media accounts on domestic social media platforms.
This included a post on Baidu's Baijia platform that said the government's policies on real estate were to blame for a rise in housing prices, which the CAC called an "irresponsible attack".
The CAC also slammed Tencent for allowing the release of an article titled, "a Chinese warplane crashed on a US aircraft carrier, killing three US soldiers?", which turned out to be a plot from a television show.
In other recent moves, authorities have closed dozens of celebrity gossip blogs and issued new rules around online video content to eliminate programmes deemed offensive.
Since the death of Nobel Peace Prize laureate Liu Xiaobo last week, censors have been working in overdrive to scrub any tributes to the democracy activist.
Both keywords and images associated with Liu have been blocked across all major social media platforms in China, according to analysts.
"His death (is) the first time we see image filtering in one-to-one chat, in addition to image filtering in group chats," the report said.
But Chinese activists who have access to virtual private network (VPN) software, which allows people to circumvent the Great Firewall, have posted tributes to Liu on Twitter and Facebook in recent days, including photos of memorials next to bodies of water, since his ashes were scattered at sea.
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