Archive for the 'Government' Category

understanding Chinese nationalism online: the telegraph and the internet

If you read one book about the Chinese Internet this year (and, yes, there aren’t very many are there?), let it be Historicizing Online Politics: Telegraphy, the Internet, and Political Participation in China, by U. Wisconsin Madison’s anthropology professor Zhou Yongming (Stanford Press, 2006). The book is actually a good read–not always the case for an academic monograph–and juxtaposes the development and role of telegraphy in the late 1800s with the development and role of the Internet in the past two decades in China. Zhou concludes that Chinese nationalism, the relationship between China and the outside world, and domestic politics are the real drivers of inventive uses of both technologies–not the other way around.

I would not skip the first two-thirds of the book, which detail the history of the telegraph through delightful descriptions of local elites and their disagreements with the Qing rulers in the north, the suspicious view of the Qing government towards the new technology, and the use of the telegraph as a tool for an unprecedented, widespread, rapid dissemination of a genre of political speech known as the "circular telegram."

But if you’re pressed for time or not interested in history or not interested in reading whole books, you can focus on the last third of the book, which provides a nuanced view of various forms of "political participation" on the Chinese Internet in the past two decades. Zhou provides superb analysis of how the Chinese government has welcomed the Internet while at the same time regulating it as heavily as it can, not least through self-censorship by online writers. What I especially love about the Internet work is that Zhou takes a nice, long look at the people and ideas behind a number of important early websites, blogs, and BBS forums dealing with politics, some of which are ongoing such as V-War Forum 铁血社区 and the People’s Daily’s Strengthening China Forum 强国论坛 and others of which have been shut down such as, Michael Anti or recently, Century China Salon.  A few of the key ideas from the book’s conclusion:

…the Chinese state has had to open up some online space to newly emerged netizens, while employing online tools to confront those who might use it for political purposes that go against its interests. In the meantime, Chinese intellectuals, marginalized minjian writers, and niche Internet surfers like the military fan groups have all made efforts to expand political participation, in which they have succeeded to a certain degree, especially in their own websites and BBS forums.  Yet so far, the Internet has not been as influential and effective in shaping the public sphere as the circular telegram was a century ago (p. 234).

…the position of Chinese nationalists online is not explained by theorizing that they have been misled by the Chinese state and consequently do not "get it right." Rather, they are in fact well informed through the Internet and other media, but are responding in ways that are not congruent with the expected changes the information is supposed to exert upon its receivers, that is, by becoming pro-democratic opponents of the current regime (p. 239). 

Zhou’s latest article appears in June 2006 issue of Chinese University of Hong Kong’s Twenty-First Century Review (二十一世纪, in Chinese), with two other articles under the heading of Freedom of the Press and Access to Information on the Internet.  Zhou’s article is: "The Privatization of Regulation and the Reception Context of Internet Information," which looks to be a more updated discussion of some of the changes since research for the book discussed above was done in the early 2000s.

Chinese Cops Blog!

20060723_copblog

Danwei points us over to 中国第一公安博客 (China Security First Blog). Blog entries include press statements, incident accounts, personal anecdotes, and, last but not least, a voting contest for the hottest female cop.

Taking a comparative view, a quick glance through the LAPD blog reveals its lack of the personal touch: no BBS-style publicity photos, very few personal accounts, and, of course, no hottest cop contest.

Do check out the China Security First Blog, the soundtrack is great.

Bilis on the BBS

Tropical Storm Bilis hit southern China over the weekend, killing over 200 people, flooding major
cities, sweeping away houses and cutting railways, power and water supplies. The BBS forums are full of first person reports and comments on the effects of the storm, as well as evaluations of offical responses.  You can clearly see how the BBS is acting as a space to trade concrete news about the status of specific areas, as well as about how to help those in need.

A few examples:

Daqi BBS reposted a Xilu BBS post titled "Bilis casualties not seen in the domestic media", which shows 3 photos from Getty Images Editorial, complete with watermarks.  Interesting that some Chinese are using services like Getty Images to find out about breaking news through photos that might not appear in the Chinese media.

An earlier July 17 Daqi post has many photos of the flooding in Guangdong’s Shaoguan and Lechang including this one from Phoenix TV:

Shaoguan_floods_2

 

Excerpts from the comments:

This happens once every four years, which means four years’ time to prepare.  That’s proof that the water management engineering is incomplete. A big flood is great–the officials can not only express great love for the people but also spend lots of government funds, they can not only receive people’s gratitude but also make lots of false accident reports…

[July 18] Several continuous days of storming, I went back and checked the text messages I’ve gotten during this time: 1) July 15 noon, from Shaoguan Electricity Bureau; 2) July 16 noon, from Shaoguan Third Defense; 3)July 17 10 a.m., from Shaoguan Tourism Association; 4) July 17 7 p.m., from Shaoguan Public Security Bureau; 5) July 17 7 p.m., from Municipal Party Committee. Don’t tell me that there wasn’t any news before the water invaded? This is a serious dereliction of duty on the part of the city government! What are the leaders doing? Resting over the weekend? This time we’ve clearly seen the level of Shaoguan city leaders–they’re good at talking on paper but when they knew that the flood was coming they did not make the necessary preparations. They didn’t even protect important places like the water works.  And they didn’t appear beforehand to announce the truth to the people.  Most of the news this time came from the Internet.

What are you making noise about? Lechang isn’t Indonesia! [this is a rare negative comment]

[July 19] The first thing I’m going to do to take action against the tragedy is to repair and clean my and my friends and neighbors’ homes. You have to rely on yourself for these kinds of things.  Others help has its limits.

[July 19] It’s not cold outside now–is there enough food and water?

Everyone can go here for more news about Lechang.

a ticket to Shangri La

We’ve got a wonderful new contributor at Virtual China — Kathrine Hoersted, Danish social anthropologist. Kathrine is going to be exploring non-Han (something like 90% of mainland China identifies as belonging to the Han group) Chinese virtual places and spaces.  Think Tibetan, Mongolian, Uighur, Naxi, and more.  We’re trying to map out where non-Han online activity and expression shows up, and how much of it is created by non-Han Chinese themselves. Kathrine starts by trying to find Shangri La –Lyn 

It used to be an imagined place, but now it has been rediscovered as a physical location on earth, and is even promoted in the virtual world.

To the Tibetans "Shamba La" is a mythical imagined place where people are said to live peacefully for all eternity. "Shangri La" entered the Western imagination via James Hilton’s bestselling 1933 novel Lost Horizon.  In the fictional book he described a physical place in Tibet which he called Shangri La, where people of all religions and ethnicities coexist in happy harmony and live to be hundreds of years old.

In today’s cash-driven Chinese tourist market, competitive discussions have arisen between counties in Sichuan and Yunnan about where Shangri La was really situated. Many arguments and intents to prove the exact location have been based on descriptions from Hilton’s fictional novel. Recently, the local government in Zhongdian town was given official permission by the Chinese authorities to rename their town and County Shangri La. So the modern Shangri La now exists in The Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Dechen (Diqing in Chinese) located in the northern part of China’s Yunnan Province.

Zhongdian itself is the subject of many an English-language travel site and blog, 6,550 images via Google, over 1000 images at Flickr. Shangri La can be taken in on a number of Chinese-operated tours. Local Tibetans, however, continue to refer to this location as Gyalthang.

Shangri_la_3

 

China’s “denied access” doll

Reporters Without Borders: The Chinese authorities seem to have stopped blocking access to the
international version of Google’s search engine, Google.com. Tests
carried out by Reporters Without Borders show that it is again
accessible in Beijing and Shanghai. Google’s unblocking tends to
confirm the theory that online censorship was stepped up for the
anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre on 4 June.

IT blogger Keso says Chinese laws are like Zen–reaching enlightenment will take a long time.  Especially for foreign companies, who keep thinking that there is some clearcut set of rules to follow.  Keso joins other bloggers in posting the "denied access" doll whose heart gets pierced every time someone tries a Google.com search and gets a blank page. 
Google_doll

Rebecca MacKinnon says
The text on the top left says: "This person has made it impossible to access Google." The text on the bottom right says: "A click on this website equals one needle prick." 

At the bottom, Keso adds: "I’m an atheist, but I do believe that there’s a hidden force that can help us.  That force is true public opinion." 

Hong Kong enlists kids in p2p monitoring

p2pnet caught this story from the South China Morning Post.  The Hong Kong Customs’ Intellectual Property Investigation Bureau has released results from its training program for youth, which teaches them how to monitor and report illegal internet transfer files.  The program aims to expand to a cadre of 200,000 youth.

" ‘Initially we used 700 cadets from the Civil Aid Service for a
three-month period,’ [Bureau Senior Superintendent] said. ‘In that time we received over 800
reports of people illegally uploading… We were then able to inform
the copyright holder and subsequently ask the website to remove the
illegal content. If only 700 youths brought us such good results in
three months, I think we will be very successful when the full 200,000
start helping us on July 19."

link

link to South China Morning Post article

Chinese blogs can drive quick public action

We all have our own ideas about what charity is and how to make it happen. Charity on the Chinese mainland takes place within the context of socialist class ideologies, Chinese Buddhism, newly resurrected pre-revolutionary civic structures, Chinese-style non-governmental organizations, and emerging Western-influenced philanthropy.

In the last few years, bloggers have also voiced social justice issues, such as the "BMW case" or the kitten crusher.  I don’t know how common it is for bloggers to call attention to specific individuals, but such a story of blogger-driven charity — and the power of blog and BBS aggregator sites — unfolded on Chinese BBS and blog aggregator Daqi.com’s Outstanding Blogs page.   

Li Guozhong, a Hunan professional photographer, was touring rural villages a few days ago with 3 colleagues when he was introduced to a dying 12 year girl with septicaemia, a potentially life-threatening infection in which large amounts  of bacteria are present in the blood.  Li snapped a few striking shots of her condition and posted them on Chinaphotocenter.com with an appeal to "save a dying 12 year old girl."  According to Li’s post, the girl’s poor rural family had only enough money for 10 days of treament at a local hospital in the fall of 2005.  When this failed to cure the blood poisoning, the skin of her leg began to rot away — and somehow her shinbone broke through the rotting skin.

Little_dongxiang_1

There the post and photos were seen by a Daqi blog editor.  Within 2 hours he had a Daqi blog opened for Li Guozhong
and prominently placed on the main page for publicity.  You can see the
photos and initial post here.  The post and photos captured the hearts of readers and started bulleting around the portals and BBS’s.  According to the account of reporter and Daqi executive Jiang Ziwei,

[The afternoon of May 25] we gave him the main page of Daqi. These
kinds of stories are not uncommon. I thought that was pretty much the
most we could do…at 11:40 pm I suddenly got an MSN message telling me
that Li Guozhong had just put up a new post saying that under the care
of a local municipal party committee and municipal government, the girl
had been saved!…I realized that in only 10 hours, the situation had
taken a turn for the better…In those 10 hours, who knows how many
people online and offline had run around taking care of this
situation.  Everyone should now recognize the value of Daqi Outstanding
Blogs insisting on bloggers using their real names.

In a case where the state has so clearly failed its rural citizens, the voice of an individual
blogger brought light and heat and very quickly, some kind of resolution.

Link to Li Guozhong’s post on going back to the village with municipal party and government officials.

Olympics watch on Virtual China

808_days_to_go

link to the English-language official Chinese 2008 Olympics website

The 2008 Olympics watch on Virtual-China.org officially begins now.  Yes, we’re a bit late to the game (see more on years of efforts here), but our focus will, of course, be how 2008 plays out in virtual China, both in Chinese and in English.

A few things we can already say for sure: There will be an explosion of blog posts written by foreign journalists and tourists, adding to the virtual view of China in non-Chinese languages; there will be an explosion of Chinese chatter on the BBS, much of it proud much of it even nationalistic; there will be photo ops and tours and carefully manicured experiences manufactured for the press and tourists; there will be plenty of unscripted encounters between first-time visitors to China and genuinely welcoming Chinese residents which will be blogged and posted and captured on film; and of course, there will be the athletes and competitions themselves, partly experienced via online access of both foreign and Chinese TV broadcasts by audiences around the world. [related update: see recent news on Chinese p2p tech company Mysee and Shanghai Media Group providing streaming feeds of the 2006 World Cup.]

What would be new and possibly groundbreaking: Chinese blogging and BBS posting in English and Chinese on their encounters with foreign media and visitors, a kind of citizen diplomacy that could feed new voices back into the whole heavily mediated extravaganza.   

In the meantime: George Lessard on the Chinese Internet Research listserv points out a Guardian article (caveat: there’s a horrendous registration process to view) on what will sure to be a major part of the story and experience of the 2008 Beijing Olympics: the press and the Chinese government. 

The Committee to Protect Journalists encouraged the International Olympic Committee to raise the issue of how "free" the foreign press will be in reporting during the games.  The IOC did raise the issue, apparently, receiving the standard bland answer from Liu Qi, Beijing’s chief organizer, followed by the take-it-all-back statement: "…just as everywhere else reporters would have to abide by local law."

Hong Kong is tougher: arrest of another file-sharer

Customs_1Photo: The Standard, Friday May 12, 2006
link to article

It looks like Hong Kong is taking a different approach to filesharing than the rest of the mainland.

A 16 year old Hong Kong student was arrested yesterday by the Hong Kong Customs Anti-Internet Piracy Team for hosting and sharing 600 pirated songs and about 20 movies.  The maximum penalty is 4 years in prison. This, six months after what the Standard calls "the world’s first criminal
conviction of a movie uploader," when a Hong Kong man went to prison for 3 months for using BitTorrent.  Officials were tipped off by a complaint from the International
Federation of the Phonographic Industry, which represents the worldwide
recording industry.

The Standard reports he used "a high-speed data line and special software to convert his computer into a server." Xinhua says this was done "by means of a
"Dynamic IP Re-direction Service" provided by a U.S. website." The Standard goes on to report:

The Web site, which Tam said had been online for
about three months, asked other users to upload music onto the server
so that the Web master could organize the files and make them available
for download.

The offender used a data line that carried a
bandwidth of up to 100 megabytes per second - far stronger than a
standard home connection of about six or 10 megabytes per second.

After
discovering the Web site, investigators managed to successfully upload
and download copyrighted the material, mainly songs by local Cantopop
artists such as Justin, Janice Vidal and Eason Chan. They also found a
few local and Hollywood movies, including Brokeback Mountain.

According to the Shanghai Daily,
Hong Kong’s music and movie industries - among Asia’s most vibrant - have also stepped up their fight against pirates.
Companies in both industries have tracked down Internet addresses
where illegal file sharing is suspected of taking place and sought
court orders demanding Internet companies provide personal details
about the alleged offenders.

The Hong Kong record industry has reached legal settlements with at
least 16 people who allegedly uploaded music for illegal sharing.

(via p2p net)

Guge still gets to back alleys of virtual China

Part trashing Google/Guge, part pursed-lips shock, part guide to the backstreets of virtual China, this May 10 "Daily Economic News 每日经济新闻" article spells out how to find drugs, guns, and other illegal things online–and makes the assertion that Guge/Google is not doing a proper filtering job. 

The reporter’s central question: "How can we prevent the Internet from becoming more of a breeding ground and bridge for harmful information?" 

The reporter compared keyword searches of 谷歌(Guge/Google) and "other major search engines."  When he/she typed in keywords "gambling 赌博," "drugs,毒品," "guns 枪支," "fake ID 假证件," and "pornography 色情," on Guge/Google, there were tens of millions of hits.  When entered on the other, unnamed search engines, however, this message came up:  "The keyword you have entered may not conform with the content of relevant laws and regulations." “你键入的关键词可能不符合相关法律法规的内容”.

A few examples of what the reporter found on Guge/Google:

  • "Fake diploma" yielded not only over 100,000 hits, but also automatically offered up such alternative keywords as "creating fake diplomas," "getting a fake ID," and "how to build a fake diploma website."
  • "Buy [the drug] Ecstasy online" got over 200,000 hits.  Most of the active links led to BBS discussion forums.  When the reporter randomly followed some of the links, they led to sites with other semi-illegal substances such as anaesthetics, along with sellers’ cellphone and QQ numbers. 

Guge/Google was given a chance to respond to the findings in the article.  But the reporter was not happy with the vague responses given by a Guge/Google spokeswoman regarding the company’s technical and moral decisions on what a "Civilized Internet" should look like.  Guge/Google has not joined the majority of Internet and content providers in pledging allegiance to civilizing the Chinese web. 

(via Donews)