Media Law

Entries categorized as ‘China’

A Dirty Pun Tweaks China’s Online Censors

March 13, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Songs about a mythical alpaca-like creature have taken hold online in China.

The New York Times – BEIJING — Since its first unheralded appearance in January on a Chinese Web page, the grass-mud horse has become nothing less than a phenomenon.

A YouTube children’s song about the beast has drawn nearly 1.4 million viewers. A grass-mud horse cartoon has logged a quarter million more views. A nature documentary on its habits attracted 180,000 more. Stores are selling grass-mud horse dolls. Chinese intellectuals are writing treatises on the grass-mud horse’s social importance. The story of the grass-mud horse’s struggle against the evil river crab has spread far and wide across the Chinese online community.

Not bad for a mythical creature whose name, in Chinese, sounds very much like an especially vile obscenity. Which is precisely the point.

The grass-mud horse is an example of something that, in China’s authoritarian system, passes as subversive behavior. Conceived as an impish protest against censorship, the foul-named little horse has not merely made government censors look ridiculous, although it has surely done that.

It has also raised real questions about China’s ability to stanch the flow of information over the Internet — a project on which the Chinese government already has expended untold riches, and written countless software algorithms to weed deviant thought from the world’s largest cyber-community.

Government computers scan Chinese cyberspace constantly, hunting for words and phrases that censors have dubbed inflammatory or seditious. When they find one, the offending blog or chat can be blocked within minutes.

Xiao Qiang, an adjunct professor of journalism at the University of California, Berkeley, who oversees a project that monitors Chinese Web sites, said in an e-mail message that the grass-mud horse “has become an icon of resistance to censorship.”

“The expression and cartoon videos may seem like a juvenile response to an unreasonable rule,” he wrote. “But the fact that the vast online population has joined the chorus, from serious scholars to usually politically apathetic urban white-collar workers, shows how strongly this expression resonates.”

Wang Xiaofeng, a journalist and blogger based in Beijing, said in an interview that the little animal neatly illustrates the futility of censorship. “When people have emotions or feelings they want to express, they need a space or channel,” he said. “It is like a water flow — if you block one direction, it flows to other directions, or overflows. There’s got to be an outlet.”

China’s online population has always endured censorship, but the oversight increased markedly in December, after a pro-democracy movement led by highly regarded intellectuals, Charter 08, released an online petition calling for an end to the Communist Party’s monopoly on power.

Shortly afterward, government censors began a campaign, ostensibly against Internet pornography and other forms of deviance. By mid-February, the government effort had shut down more than 1,900 Web sites and 250 blogs — not only overtly pornographic sites, but also online discussion forums, instant-message groups and even cellphone text messages in which political and other sensitive issues were broached.http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/12/world/asia/12beast.html

Categories: Censorship · China

China Criticizes Google and Others on Pornography

January 6, 2009 · Leave a Comment

HONG KONG — The Chinese government broadened its recent effort to limit pornography on the Internet by criticizing 19 Internet companies by name on Monday, including the two market leaders in China, Google and Baidu.

A statement posted on a government-run news site said the Ministry of Public Security and six other government agencies would work together “to purify the Internet’s cultural environment and protect the healthy development of minors.” A similar statement had been issued on Dec. 5, but attracted little attention.

Monday’s statement went a step further in saying that 19 companies had failed to do enough to stop the spread of pornography. Early Monday evening, the names of the companies were also posted on the same official Web site, along with a terse statement of why each company was on the list.http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/06/world/asia/06pornography.html?partner=permalink&exprod=permalink

Categories: Censorship · China · pornography

Chinese Bloggers Score a Victory Against the Government

July 5, 2008 · Leave a Comment

WSJ – July 5,6 – HONG KONG — Chinese authorities announced that four Communist Party, local government and security officials in Guizhou province’s Weng’an county were sacked for “severe malfeasance” over the alleged coverup of a murder, according to the state-run Xinhua news agency.

Initially, police said high-school student Li Shufen drowned, angering people who believe she was raped and murdered, perhaps by children of local officials. Even on Wednesday, the provincial party chief, Shi Zongyuan, had brushed off protests over the incident — protests that Xinhua said involved some 30,000 people — as being “used and incited by very few people with ulterior motives.” But with the announcement of the firings on Friday, he said the local officials’ “rude and rough-handed solutions” in dealing with local issues had caused the riot, according to Xinhua.

That change in stance appears to be a direct result of pressure brought by journalists and Chinese bloggers such as Zhou Shuguang, a self-styled “personal news station,” who didn’t allow the issue to drop, posting to the Internet unofficial reports along with photos and pleas from the family of the dead youth. When mainstream Chinese Web sites began deleting posts on the issue, some bloggers turned to technical workarounds, including writing their posts backwards and reposting material that had been taken down elsewhere.

Friday’s apparent change of heart is the latest sign authorities are aware that old approaches to controlling information aren’t working. Even earlier, authorities tried to get out in front of the story: In Weng’an, local officials held a news conference less than two days after the riot to give their version of events. And Xinhua also covered the riot almost immediately, in contrast to past practices of waiting days before reporting such events.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121521562007829595.html?mod=hps_us_whats_news

Categories: Bloggers · Censorship · China

China Eats Crow Over Faked Photo

February 22, 2008 · Leave a Comment


HONG KONG — It turns out that train tracks in Tibet aren’t where the antelope play.

Earlier this week, Xinhua, China’s state-run news agency, issued an unusual public apology for publishing a doctored photograph of Tibetan wildlife frolicking near a high-speed train.

The deception — uncovered by Chinese Internet users who sniffed out a Photoshop scam in the award-winning picture — has brought on a big debate about media ethics, China’s troubled relationship with Tibet, and how pregnant antelope react to noise.

The antelope imbroglio began in the summer of 2006. The Chinese government was celebrating its latest engineering feat, and an enthusiastic wildlife photographer from the Daqing Evening News was camped out on the Tibetan plateau eating energy bars and waiting for antelope to pass.http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120363429707884255.html

Categories: Antelope · Censorship · China · Ethics

Internet Sex Video Case Stirs Free-Speech Issues in Hong Kong

February 13, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Several arrests in Hong Kong for posting sexually explicit images of what appear to be some of Asia’s best-known pop stars has led to a debate over free speech on the Web.http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/13/business/worldbusiness/13internet.html?ex=1360645200&en=41108d089de2d18d&ei=5124&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink

Categories: China · Free Speech · Internet

China’s Alternative Reality

February 8, 2008 · Leave a Comment


China will soon boast more internet users than any other country. But usage patterns inside China are different from those elsewhere
ONE of the more striking end-of-year statistics pumped out recently by the Chinese government was an update on the number of internet users in the country, which had reached 210m. It is a staggering figure, up by more than 50% on the previous year and more than three times the number for India, the emerging Asian giant with which China is most often compared. Within a few months, according to Morgan Stanley, an investment bank, China will have more internet users than America, the current leader. And because the proportion of the population using the internet is so low, at just 16%, rapid growth is likely to continue for some time.

That such a big, increasingly wealthy and technologically adept country has embraced the internet is no surprise, but it has done so in a very different way from other countries. That is in large part the result of the government’s historically repressive approach towards information and entertainment. News is censored, television is controlled by the state, and bookshops and cinemas, shuttered during the Cultural Revolution, are still scarce.
http://www.economist.com/business/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10608655

Categories: China · Internet

China’s Alternative Reality

February 8, 2008 · Leave a Comment


China will soon boast more internet users than any other country. But usage patterns inside China are different from those elsewhere
ONE of the more striking end-of-year statistics pumped out recently by the Chinese government was an update on the number of internet users in the country, which had reached 210m. It is a staggering figure, up by more than 50% on the previous year and more than three times the number for India, the emerging Asian giant with which China is most often compared. Within a few months, according to Morgan Stanley, an investment bank, China will have more internet users than America, the current leader. And because the proportion of the population using the internet is so low, at just 16%, rapid growth is likely to continue for some time.

That such a big, increasingly wealthy and technologically adept country has embraced the internet is no surprise, but it has done so in a very different way from other countries. That is in large part the result of the government’s historically repressive approach towards information and entertainment. News is censored, television is controlled by the state, and bookshops and cinemas, shuttered during the Cultural Revolution, are still scarce.
http://www.economist.com/business/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10608655

Categories: China · Internet

Great Firewall of China Faces Online Rebels

February 4, 2008 · Leave a Comment

WUHAN, China — As an 18-year-old student with an interest in the Internet, Zhu Nan had been itching to say something about the country’s pervasive online censorship system, widely known here as the Great Firewall.

When China’s censors began blocking access to the popular photo-sharing site Flickr, Mr. Zhu felt the moment had come. Writing on his blog last year, the student, who is now a freshman at a university in this city, questioned the rationale for Internet restrictions, and in subsequent posts, began passing along tips on how to evade them.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/04/world/asia/04china.html?ex=1359867600&en=aba0467cac42f7c8&ei=5124&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink

Categories: Censorship · China · Internet · students