
HANOI – Vietnam will impose fines ranging from 20 million to 30 million Vietnamese dong ($794 to 1,190) on individuals who provide or share fake, false, distorted or defamatory information on social media that harms the reputation of agencies and organizations or the honor and dignity of individuals, local newspaper Nhan Dan reported on Tuesday.
The same penalty range will apply to violations such as sharing graphic images depicting killings, violence, accidents or other disturbing scenes, distributing copyrighted journalistic, literary or artistic works without authorization, promoting prohibited goods or services, posting maps of Vietnam that misrepresent the country's sovereignty, or sharing links to online content banned under Vietnamese law, the report said.
Under the new regulations, fines ranging from 30 million to 50 million Vietnamese dong will be imposed for sharing content that distorts history, denies revolutionary achievements, undermines national unity, insults religions, or incites gender or racial discrimination, provided the acts do not warrant criminal prosecution.
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The same penalty range also applies to disclosing state secrets, personal privacy or other confidential information below the threshold for criminal liability, as well as spreading false information that causes public panic, disrupts socio-economic activities, hinders the operation of state agencies or public officials, or infringes upon the lawful rights and interests of organizations and individuals, the report added.
The policies are included in a government decree that takes effect on July 1.
