X
Tech

Chinese internet users top 800 million in June

More than 98 percent of internet users in China have smartphones, according to a state-backed report.
Written by Cyrus Lee, Contributor

China, the world's most populated economy, has seen internet users surpass the 800-million mark for the first time this year, assisted by its buoyant internet-based businesses, from mobile payments to smartphone-enabled bike sharing and food delivery.

The total number of internet users in China reached 802 million as of the end of June this year, up 30 million during the six-month period, according to a report by state-backed agency China Internet Network Information Centre (CNNIC) last week.

Smartphones, owned by 98.3 percent of internet users in China, are currently the dominant tool for Chinese people to access to internet, said the report. This is thanks to the continuous optimisation and upgrading of internet infrastructure construction in the country, where network coverage and speed surged notably while costs continued to decline, it said.

In spite of 4.9 percent decline in smartphone shipments last year, China remains the world's largest smartphone market, where mobile shipments reached 444.3 million in 2017, IDC said in February.

But the latest internet penetration rate of 57.7 percent, considering China's 1.4 billion population, remains relatively low, with some two people in five still not having an opportunity to access the internet there.

Online shopping and mobile payments are two of the most commonly internet-based activities in China, both of which have been adopted by 71 percent of internet users. About one in three Chinese internet users used smartphones to book a car ride or rent a shared bike. More than one user in five also used the internet to manage their finances, up from 16.7 percent by the end of 2017.

Short video was one of the fastest growing online businesses in China in the first half of 2018, with about three in four Chinese internet users watching short videos on various apps on smartphones, the report added.

Leading short video platform Douyin, seen as the Chinese version of Music.ly, reported in July that its monthly active users exceeded 500 million, one month after it claimed that its daily active users reached 150 million.

PREVIOUS AND RELATED COVERAGE

<="" p="" rel="follow">

    <="" p="" rel="follow"> <="" p="" rel="follow">

<="" p="" rel="follow">

<="" p="" rel="follow"> <="" p="" rel="follow">Open port exposes data of 50.5M GOMO app users

Port 80 was left open by Guangzhou-based developer Sungy Mobile, exposing personal data of more than 50 million accounts of its GOMO apps--popular amongst children--including user names, passwords, and mobile numbers.

Huawei: Australian 5G ban 'politically motivated'

Huawei has argued that the ban preventing it from taking part in Australia's 5G network rollouts is politically motivated and not based in fact or 'equitable decision making'.

Alibaba cloud revenue climbs 93 percent to $710M

Chinese internet giant says growth in paying customers and revenue from higher value-added services boosted cloud revenue for its June quarter, and points to Southeast Asia and South Asia as expansion targets amidst China-US tariff war.

Import tariffs on $16b of US and Chinese products come into effect

China has prepared its own list of import tariffs covering $16 billion of US products, mirroring those previously announced by Donald Trump on $16 billion of Chinese products.

Apple purges 25,000 gambling apps from China app store

Move comes after Chinese state media rebukes iPhone maker for allowing the apps, which are illegal in China, to remain on its app store.

80% of IT business leaders believe employees need mobile devices to do their jobs(TechRepublic)

A 2018 survey shows that a majority of IT executives think that mobile devices are vital to enterprise success. But keeping those devices useful and secure requires a coordinated policy.

Editorial standards