Monthly Archive for April, 2007Page 2 of 3

Neocha first event in Shanghai

Neospring

Japanese style poster of Neocha (partial poster, see link for full poster)

Last Saturday, April 14, I took part in an exciting youth party held by www.neocha.com. I was so impressed to see so many young people, some were local while some were obviously from other countries, eg. America, Britain and Japan, Korea etc, and I even saw quite a few middle aged foreign visitors there!

I met with Jon Lombardo from the US, who is one of the Neocha founders, we talked about why and how he organised this activity in Shanghai, and what he was going to do for the next step. Jon told me that Neocha was a platform for young people who had the passion and ideas to create their own arts and hold events, to inspire creations among young people. That was why I saw so many young people, but quite a few of the young artists seemed to be from Japan or Korea. I think Japanese and Korean fashion and trend is still having an impact on Chinese young generations, which keeps getting stronger.

Through talking with him, I was a little bit depressed since he told me that he would remove the Neocha center to Beijing since he thought Beijing’s culture atmosphere was better than that of Shanghai. I couldn’t believe that Shanghai young people doesn’t have as many interests as Beijing young people on this kind of activity? And I did a small research on Google and Baidu, I inputed ‘Beijing (in Chinese) Neocha’ and ‘Shanghai (in Chinese) Neocha’ respectively into Google and Baidu, here’s the results for ‘Beijing( in Chinese) Neocha’ related websites:Google: 399 , Baidu: 56.  Shanghai (in Chinese) Neocha’: Google:  627  Baidu: 177

Apparently Shanghai’s media or Shanghai people are paying more
attention to Neocha’s event than those in Beijing. In this case I am
wondering whether Jon would change his idea and to support and provide
more great service to Shanghai users of his website? Here are some Shanghai based posters about this Neocha event:
IONLY
JAMJAM

Polalife
Boubo

Chinese internet old aged users: three stories

[Note: this post written by Nan Yang in Shanghai: we're hoping she'll become a regular on Virtual China! --Lyn]

I know three middle aged/old Chinese persons using internet, not only for fun.

Here are their stories.

The first story is about my mother and her internet lovers.

Chinesekisses

My mother is an English teacher in middle school, and she bought the first computer in autumn, 2002, because I was supposed to introduce an American man I met on internet to her. He was always online most of the time everyday, I got to know him when I was surfing internet in the computer center in city library in summer, 2002.

They started chatting in English on MSN since then….and now, with the time went by, though this man tried to visit China, but failed, my mother got to know many more men on the internet, most of them were strangers from social websites, such as www.hotornot.com, www.chinesekisses.com etc. She could insist on hunting for a boyfriend under the support of me, or I should say, because she really found internet hopeful and helpful.

She would rather having dinner in front of the webcam, just to show Chinese home cooking, and I asked her to come back to the dinner table, but she insisted on having dinner in front of the computer and chatting with her friend. One day, we went shopping and she bought a new coat, and when she got home she couldn’t help showing her new coat in webcam to her American internet friend. It was just like a fashion show, and the man overseas always praised her. Another time, the man in the US showed a cheese cake he made by himself, and ate it in front of the cam. I even saw him drank a whole bottle of juice!

But during that period of time, she had just one American friend I introduced to her, and just chat with him on MSN ( sometimes she used Skype to contact my aunt in Germany, and chatted with her sometimes). For the rest of the time online, she just visit some most famous website and clicked here and there without any purpose.

In the summer of 2005, I happened to find a very interesting website by accident. And then I realized it might be attractive for my mother as well. So I helped her register and uploaded her photo on Hotornot, and then her photo started to be checked and scored by people. So did I. And we even competed on our scores! She uploaded a picture in which she pretended playing my piano at home, http://scoreboards.hotornot.com/julin and during the first week she got 8.6 on Hotornot which it was not a bad score! She was very excited and got quite a lot of messages, and some of them from the people with stars( star means the people can create the content of the message by himself.). Then she could keep in touch with these people by Email or even added them on MSN.

Those days on Hotornot, she got to know some people and chatted with them on MSN everyday, since most of them were from America, she often stayed up late at night to chat with them. Last winter when I went home for the Spring Festival, I found a very interesting scene on her computer desk and it reminded me of the scene she was using computer at home…One computer in front of her, one TV set on the left handside, and one notebook with poems she copied long time ago for the purpose of quoting some sentences when she was writing to her internet friends. One of our biggest joys was marking people on Hotornot.

One day she told me, all the people on Hotornot were not real persons, and what they wanted wasn’t serious relationships…and she got frustrated but she happened to see another ad on Hotornot…which was Chinesekisses. And again she registered by herself and waited until people who was interested in her profile clicked on her and wrote to her…

Now she’s got two steady male friends she likes very much, for the first American man, she felt a little bit despair since we had helped him to come to China, but he was not able to make the schedule…Recently she talked with a lot about how she felt to her two men, and she told me it was painful for her to make a choice between these two men since she likes them both. This summer she’s going to visit Australia first and try to make a decision there, to stay with him or to go on hunting for another man on the internet…

The second story I want to tell is about a middle-age man in Shanghai, who’s a big fan of photography. I got to know him through a website  http://shanghai.kijiji.cn/ and then we chatted on MSN. He told me that he was keen on taking pictures of young girls, and he has a website to show these pictures.
http://www.cdd.cn/home.asp?m_id=90827   Sometimes he would show me the new pictures he took, and chat about art sometimes. He goes online every early morning, and sometimes says hello to me in the early morning. But he doesn’t write blog.

The third story I want to share is about an old retired man in Shanghai. He has a blog, which I think it’s very cool and elegant.He describes himself as an old, just retired man with a wide range of interests. http://blog.voc.com.cn/taozengyan/ He showed a flower show in one of the biggest park in Shanghai recently. I was impressed by his positive attitude towards life and his energy on taking and sharing these beautiful pictures with other people.

Older_internet_user

That’s the end of these three stories.:-)

Blog analysis of 花花世界

Huahuasijie

Two interesting features I noticed on 花花世界 (roughly translated as "Beautiful World"), the blog of 原小娟, a well-known food critic and magazine editor:

  1. As she was diagnosed with cancer, her blog’s focus went from food & drink to her illness. Interestingly enough, some of the new posts meld the two topics together — for example, a post about a herbal remedy.
  2. Her blogroll includes "Husband’s blog" and "Son’s blog", shown below:

Huahuasijie2

Huahuasijie3

Unfortunately the child’s blog doesn’t actually seem like his own — I assume his father ghostwrites it for him as he’s referred to in 3rd person. It’s interesting to see common posts that thread the three blogs together (sadly, these usually have to do with 原小娟’s illness).

Via PostShow.

when re-posting becomes a crime

In case you didn’t see it, Roland Soong at ESWN has translated a news item on a Hainan pharmaceutical worker who was detained for nine months on charges of re-posting an essay online.  The facts are not in dispute–on a pharmaceutical industry discussion forum, Zhang Zhijian had reposted an essay that he found online describing alleged fraud between another pharmaceutical company and the State Food and Drug Administration.  He’d heard rumors about the situation, and indeed company and state officials were eventually arrested.  But all Zhang did was search online, locate a relevant essay (we never find out who wrote the essay), and re-post it. 

What happened next indicates the fragile legal status of basic online activity in China, and how that legal ambiguity can result in the criminalization of pretty much anything.  Zhang became the target of the subject of the article, Kongliyuan Enterprises, which dragged him into legal and media battles, accusing him of deliberately seeking to damage their commercial reputation. Kongliyuan made three extraordinary demands of him: that his parents travel across the country to apologize in person to Kongliyuan; that he personally admit fault on the Internet; and that he compensate them with 100,000 RMB for their expenses!  What’s even more extraordinary is that these charges resulted in Zhang being formally arrested and detained for nine months while the allegations made their way through court. 

QQ numbers: property under law?

One of the areas I’m curious about (see previous posts here and here) is the development of practices and laws concerning virtual property in China.  China currently has a system of mixed ownership models (private, state, cooperative, joint venture, etc.) and a range of legal protections for different kinds of property (the recent nailhouse events are an example of this).  No reason to think that we won’t, therefore, see some unique solutions to the kinds of virtual economy problems that the folks at Terra Nova have been writing about so eloquently for years.  Found this on cndig: from the China Youth Daily, "How much are QQ numbers actually worth?"  Below is a summary of what I found interesting in the article.

Apparently there was a vigorous debate on the legal status of virtual property at a China Forum on Internet and IPR Criminal Protection that recently took place in Shenzhen.  Because the law is unclear about the status of various kinds of virtual assets, it’s hard for officials to know how to define and prosecute virtual asset theft.

Located in Shenzhen, Tencent CEO Ma Huateng in his capacity as a People’s Congress Deputy for Shenzhen recently submitted a report on IP crimes and virtual assets to the Shenzhen Municipal Procuratorate. The report points out that Tencent is often a victim of Internet crimes and that legal mechanisms for addressing these problems are inadequate.

For instance, the Shenzhen police recently cracked a large-scale Internet crime ring at the end of last year that was responsible for stealing 3 million QQ accounts over a two year period. 

CNNIC reports that 61% of gamers have had virtual assets stolen and 77% feel that the current online atmosphere is unsafe for virtual assets.

There are two distinct camps in the legal discussion of virtual assets.  One side thinks that virtual assets constitute an investment like any other, and are exchangeable with real money, and therefore should be protected under the law like any other asset.  The other side thinks that virtual assets are only valuable in the context of the game, and only for gamers.  They’re not universally recognized assets with a universally recognized value.  They are also only retrievable if the server is available. 

China University of Political Science and Law professor Hou Guoyun sees virtual assets as ill gotten gains and believes that giving them legal protection will not stop virtual asset theft, and will only encourage more young people to enter the world of gaming. 

The Internet Crime section of the Shenzhen Public Security Bureau says they get roughly ten reports PER DAY of stolen virtual assets, which are hard to know how to prosecute given the current status under law.  Should they be classified as robberies?  Fraud? A judge in Shanghai says that virtual asset cases often cause vigorous debate inside China’s courts as to whether they should be classified as crimes or not.

Back in Shenzhen’s Nanshan district, legal cases on record have clearly established that 1 Q coin equals 1 RMB, and that Q coins clearly have the attributes of property.  Likewise for virtual equipment that can be bought and sold in a market. However, the status of QQ numbers is less clear. Can they be defined as property? Because the value of QQ numbers is hard to estimate, it then becomes hard to define QQ number theft as criminal theft.

Professor and legal expert Zhao Bingzhi points out that because QQ numbers can be exchanged in an online platform this shows that they have an economic value and therefore are no different than other objects which are currently under the category of property theft.

shanghai + bladerunner

Apparently my IFTF colleague Mike Liebhold isn’t the only one who thinks Bladerunner when gazing across the Shanghai skyline, especially Pudong.  Flickr has 16 photos tagged Shanghai + bladerunner; Google images has over 4000.
Enjoy.

Bladerunner_shanghai
Pudong’s Jinmao tower in the fog.

(Tokyo is still the bladerunner grandfather: on Flickr there are 104 photos tagged with bladerunner + tokyo and 25 tagged with bladerunner + nyc and 29 with bladerunner + london and 23 with bladerunner + hongkong)

start visiting startdrawing: chinese art

As my Institute for the Future colleague David Pescovitz likes to say, if you’re trying to understand the direction of change, watch what artists are doing. That’s why a site recently pointed out by another IFTF colleague, Mike Love, is helpful and intriguing. Startdrawing.org is curated by Singaporean artists Josef Lee, a designer / illustrator and JunMing, a cartoonist. They describe their site as:

a web resource portal for Asia’s artists and drawings.This site was started with the aim of showcasing and sharing drawings from talented artists in Asia, and in the process, promote the joys of drawing. Our motto: Drawings from Asia. Drawings by Asians.

You can search by categories, including news, illustrations, concept art, fine arts, comics, architecture, products/toys, and motion.  Or search regionally: click on the China link and luxuriate in images by Chinese artists, some of them well known outside of China.  For instance, images from oil painter Zhang Linhai’s latest exhibition, described as

almost surrealist oil paintings explicitly articulating feelings
such as sadness, fear, a need for escape, bemusement, and even more
disconcerting, the vapid glare of shock or even possession.

Zhang_linhai

Chinese lifehack website

Life_hack

For Chinese folks experiencing information overload, there is lifebang — a Chinese lifehacking site that contains mostly translations of productivity and Getting Things Done literature, such as Networking for People who Hate Networking or Ten More Ways to Create a Breakthrough in Your Life (from lifehack.org).

A glimpse into an HK art director’s mind…

Gwen Yip (an HK artist / advertising art director) has recently begun to blog, in the form of a visual diary, her time in London. Here’s an excerpt from her entry about her conversation with someone from Wieden + Kennedy:

Gwenyipentry

This type of illustrated blog and even the line-art style seem particularly popular with creatives in Virtual China. Wonder why? (I have to confess I’ve used the format occasionally myself offline.) Link to Gwen Yip’s Working Holiday in London.

And here’s a sample of her work :

Gwenyipsample

More work samples on her Flickr page.

Twittervision of China

Go here to see a real-time map of Twitters–short messages from random people who are letting us all know what they are doing. Warning: it’s hypnotic.  You can see the different Twitters popping up nonstop all over the world…people in the middle of the night, just leaving the house in the morning, getting ready to go to bed, pondering.  The map isn’t that good for China–it kind of looks like everyone is somewhere around Wuhan

Twittermap

But watch for awhile and you’ll recognize the names…Isaac, Flypig, Engadget Chinese, Sinanews (!) [Update:] Fons Tuinstra, and so on.  You can sign up for your own account here.

MeMedia vol. 3 sums up some of the Chinese chatter on Twitter.  There’s even something similar in Chinese, now in beta.