Monthly Archive for September, 2006

China CSR database 中国企业社会责任机构指南

Chinacsrmap

Want to find out what good that company is up to in China? Check out this useful English language database of CSR (corporate social responsibility) efforts of organizations in China, officially called the China CSR Map 中国企业社会责任机构指南.  You can search the database by type of organization (business, academic, NGO, government, media, etc.) or field of interest (environment, arts & culture, women & children, supply chain, etc.).  China CSR Map is also in Chinese.

Search by an organization’s name to find a short history of company background, mission statement, history in China, CSR efforts to date in China, related publications put out by the company, and partners in China. For example, I learned that among other projects, Toyota is engaged in northwestern China, one of the country’s poorest regions, helping with college tuition and "talent training."

And I learned that among other projects, the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) helped establish a legal aid center for migrant workers in Shanghai and spent more than $10 million on the Canada-China Clean Production Joint Program (1996
to 2003) aimed to decrease environment deterioration caused by outdated
infrastructure, management systems and production technology; to
improve the industrial production; and to establish new regulations and
laws on clean production.

And, I learned that Nokia (China) Investment does a lot of great work with young Chinese entrepreneurs.

(via CSRChina Yahoo Group)

get out the word: OneWebDay 全球化的互联网节日

Onewebday

OneWebDay is planning to create an historic event to mark the launch of
OneWebDay by facilitating the largest global online photo collaboration
resulting in a visualization of the web made up of photos posted by
millions of people around the world. This visualization will show the
power of online collaboration. OneWebDay is working with CNET Networks’
Webshots, a global photo-sharing
community, to make it easy for web users globally to contribute a
digital photo and label it with “onewebday.”

OneWebDay remains fairly invisible in virtual China, but hopefully it will pick up steam.  I know there must be literally millions of Chinese netizens who would love to participate. 

On the English language side, China doesn’t show up yet, at least not in a OneWebDay.org search or a Flickr onewebday search or a Webshots search.  Webshots apparently is not letting people access any of the onewebday photos until the day itself (which seems strange), so we can’t know at this point how many photo submissions are coming in from China. 

On the Chinese language/search side, a "OneWebDay" search on Baidu comes up with this:

  • I find what looks like it could be the Chinese name, 全球化的互联网节日, on a very cool web design site called Blueidea
    蓝色理想, at the Blueidea XML News Aggregator;
  • the phrase also shows up on three other sites including twice in the archives of the venerable, totally tricked out plod (this guy loves widgets and tracking and participating). 
  • Searches in English and Chinese on Donews come up empty.

Sunday Strip: 豌豆笑傳

From a strip entitled 豌豆笑傳 (The Peaboy Chronicles).

As always, translations in maroon:

20060917_peaboy

Link to original strip on Sina, link to comic’s website.

Debauchery!

20060911_duoluo_logo

堕落 duolo.com (contextually translated into "debauchery") is like 豆瓣 (Douban) for food, entertainment and travel; that is, it is a social/sharing site for those things. One gripe I have is that the headings for items or posts are not well restricted; one item is titled "the few things I ordered at YanYangTian."

duolo.com
Via PostShow. (Thanks zuofei for fixing the URL typo!)

Chinese spambot?

I see one way the blogspam is done from China:

Spam

Kart Rider 跑跑卡丁车 rides to Chinese gaming glory

Popkart_1

Pacific Epoch noted in a small item on Tuesday 9/12 that the very popular South Korean Kart Rider 跑跑卡丁车 game hit 700,000 concurrent Chinese users recently.  We’ve written about Kart Rider before, mostly to say that it’s a big, big deal in online China and yet remains almost invisible in the English language media aside from the always reliable Pacific Epoch and, every now and then, gaming blogs like playnoevil.

3D Q-style racing game Kart Rider hit 700,000 peak concurrent users
(PCU) on September 10, Kart Rider operator Shiji Tiancheng announced on
Monday. Shiji Tiancheng licensed Kart Rider from
[South Korean game developer] Nexon and began open
beta testing for the game on March 17. Shiji Tiancheng has 70 million
registered users for Kart Rider.

 Shiji Tiancheng is pretty excited about this.  The official Kart Rider news item reads: Today (9/11/06) will become a date written in stone for Kart Rider 《跑跑卡丁车》gamers, today will become a great moment in the history of China’s online games, today is another milestone in the development of China’s online gaming! ….When the game opened in March 2006 we had 120,000 concurrent users after 3 days, 200,000 after 10 days, 500,000 after 3 months, and now, 700,000!

(via Playnoevil)

mobile internet-related presentations

Mobilemonday

Just came across the mobilemonday beijing blog, which I got from the excellent Read/WriteWeb post on best Chinese Web apps.  MobileMonday has a set of archived presentations, some pdf, some ppt, which might be of use to some of us. Things like:

YeePay - Payment in China  (on e-payment services)
PDX.cn - Mobile Blogging Community

mobilemonday is a worldwide network:

Initiated in Finland in 2000 as an answer to the rising complexity of the telecom business and the necessity to enhance cooperations, Mobile Monday today counts over 20,000 members and 20 chapters worldwide, Mobile Monday is the leading global mobile industry-related event and community.

web 2.0 cross-cultural mobs: Digg battles

DiggcnDigg

Some of you will already have seen this story, but it’s really worth taking a closer look at it to understand some of the ways that online "community" gets stuck at the border, and at how online "mobs" turn to the oldest and ugliest stereotypes in the book once they’re mobilized. 

It all started on September 2 when Oliver Sun, a self-described "mixed Chinese who lives in Shanghai and Switzerland and lives off his websites ," came across a Chinese website called Digg.cn and wrote a post for his must-see wonderful new China Web 2.0 blog, Wangr [English version, with links to Chinese], which he co-edits with James.  Oliver noted that the digg.cn site was pretty much an exact copy of the American Digg site.  For those of us who don’t use Digg, the basic idea is that people tag (or "digg) online news items or blog posts, which are then voted on or "dugg" by other users.  The ones that seem most important/interesting to most people will get the most "diggs": a user-generated recommendation system. To get on the front page of Digg, then, is to be top of mind for the most people within the Digg user base.

I’ve seen Digg.cn in the past.  Occasionally someone will "digg" a Virtual China post.  But the numbers of digger/recommenders are so small — often 10 or less — that it hadn’t seemed like it was running quite up to speed yet. 

Oliver’s post very quickly attracted a lot of attention, that is, "diggs," on the American Digg site.  Some Diggers didn’t take kindly to a Chinese version that looked almost exactly the same as the American site, so they used the structure of the Digg system to join the Chinese site, tag politically sensitive or even fabricated stories, and get their friends and fellow Diggers from the US site to join in and "digg," pumping up the numbers, ensuring that their entries would dominate the site until the Digg.cn editors decided to delete them. 

As Oliver described it after the fact, on his personal blog,

I blogged about some chinese digg.com clone that was actually the total same.
After that and about 700 diggs the whole site was just trashed and burned.
Litereally,
diggers went on there and totally crashed it, made real mean and racist
comments as well as they uploaded a few very nasty pics.

Reading down the Diggers’ comments on Oliver’s original post is illuminating–you hear all the arguments being trotted out in other contexts about China’s so-called lack of creativity. And then, you see the mob forming. Here are some excerpts.  Please note, I’ve pulled out quotes that represent some of the views there, but the posts here were not written in direct response to one another.

These guys did a straight copy of the entire Digg.com site! Well
everything seems to be original creation of digg….the colors, the CSS
style sheets, the functionality of the site, what else?
JavaScript…..?!?!

In my opinion, this can be useful for people in China. We love digg,
why can’t they have a version in chinese? Maybe they could team up with
digg.com and have digg go international. This could actually be not a
bad idea.

Respect copy right and get some creativity of your own for gods sake…

…Nobody is stopping people from making international versions of digg.
Just don’t call it digg, don’t copy the design 100% and don’t
copy+paste the html/css/javascript code. People are free to make their
own version of digg as long as they put in the work to make it from
scratch like everyone else.

They (or should I say we?) complain about stringent copyright
enforcement from the music and movie industry, DRM in music and movies,
etc, but when they see a Chinese site breach Digg’s copyright, they
bitch and cry foul for the first time in their lives.

and then: I think the digg army should help take this down… eg: infultrate it with "stories" about goatse, lemonparty or tubgirl?

later: Please, you may strongly hate them for cloning digg, but thats no
reason to act like a slurring moron and submit things like "DIGG.COM
OWNS U CHINKS" to their page.

but:
Sign up and DIGG this article to the frontpage, I’ve discovered that they didn’t disable javascripting in the submit section.

Digg that… and their frontpage will crash every IE that visits that site.

Oh, you’ll really have to go read the whole thing yourself. 

As Oliver says: …things like witch-hunts still find lot’s of followers.
The angry mobs still are around, and more importantly they’re easier gathered throught the net.

One well-known or even not so well known blog can destroy a whole community or business.

and a reader comments: sites like digg can attract web attention very quickly and at such
enormous scale. like many mob actions, things can turn ugly fast…

The status of Chinese domain names

The status of Chinese domain names… not ready.

For example, www.新浪.com (sina) leads to a not found error at http://www.xn--efvx5o.com/.

A more interesting example is www.搜狗.com (sogou), which redirects to http://www.epai.com/yima/domain/domain.htm, which redirects to http://999.5333.com/, which redirects to a generic domain not in use portal http://www.chunu.com, shown below, with some interesting text links (albeit non-working):

20060911_chuunu_1

Google’s new digs in Beijing

Want to know what Google looks like in China?  The company moved into their own building in the Qinghua Science Park in northwest Beijing last week, as documented on Flickr by Hong Bo, or Keso, founder and editor of China’s wellknown IT community Donews; and by blogger and cultural commentator Flypig. The photos kind of say it all.  It’s a vibrant bunch of people who are pretty happy to where they are…and who get treated really, really well with the expectation that they’ll perform superlatively. Google China looks like it has done a great job of importing all the elements
of an environment that supports creative work at Google US.  It’s the other stuff that’s the hardest, of course: Building a new kind of mainland Chinese creativity and ingenuity, one that extends beyond the Silicon-Valley-esque products and practices coming from Google headquarters and produces real value in the Chinese context.

Here’s Keso looking like a geek rock star, which he kind of is:
Google_keso

Li Kaifu greets the ceremonial dragon:

Google_dragon

They do things that "Googlers" do (Google + ren, or 人, the Mandarin word for "person", = Googler).
play fussball

Google_fussball

get massaged

Massage_google_1

worship superheroes

Google_superman

The coolest t-shirt of the week…

Google_tshirt_2

Keso points out in his blog post that despite not having any officially "Chinese" design elements, Googlers themselves provided some of their own such as red lanterns, propaganda posters, and calligraphic renderings of the character for "search".