The Malaysia government is in the process of determining the mechanism for identifying the valid owners of social media accounts in the country.
Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Minister Gobind Singh Deo said the mechanism was crucial to ensure that the social media accounts owned by the ministry and government agencies were valid and were not abused.
"We will now look at one approach where we can confirm the names used in the social media. The people frequently look at the accounts available in the social media and think that they are the official website of the ministry or agencies concerned.
"So, we must have a mechanism whereby we can confirm that the people know information from which website is the official one by the government,” he told the reporters as cited from Bernama.
Gobind said the matter has indeed become one of the government's concerns and the ministry has identified two categories of illegal accounts on social media that need to be addressed.
“Two categories are being looked at. One, the unofficial handle name (account owner). This enabled many parties to use and act on various matters. The second category, we (Ministry) found that there are many social media accounts where people make various comments anonymously,” he said.
In another development, Gobind Singh denied tax on music and video streaming services including Netflix was restricting the people's right to entertainment.
The tax was imposed not as a restriction but based on a detailed study by the Finance Ministry, he said. When tabling Budget 2019 on Friday (Nov 2), Finance Minister Lim Guan Eng announced the government would be imposing and collecting taxes on online services including software, music, video or any digital advertisements from Jan 1, 2020.
source: Bernama, thestar.com.my