Michael Anti (aka Zhao Jing), a key figure in China’s new journalism, explores the growing power of the Chinese internet & the truth behind the great firewall of China.l
He has been blogging from China for 12 years. Despite the control the central government has over the Internet — “All the servers are in Beijing” — he says that hundreds of millions of microbloggers are in fact creating the first national public sphere in the country’s history, and shifting the balance of power in unexpected ways.
One morning in 2011, Michael Anti woke up to find himself a nonperson: His Facebook profile, with 1,000+ contacts, had been suspended. Anti, whose given name is Zhao Jing, ran up against Facebook’s real-name policy – but he points out that for Chinese bloggers and information activists, the pseudonym is an important protection for the free exchange of information.
Facebook itself is blocked in China (along with Twitter and YouTube), but the country boasts some 500 million netizens – including 200 million microbloggers on sites like Sina Weibo, a freewheeling though monitored platform for text and photo updates that offers, perhaps for the first time, a space for public debate in China. It’s not a western-style space, but for China it is revolutionary. It’s the first national public sphere. Microblogs’ role became clear in the wake of the high-speed train crash in Wenzhou in 2011, when Weibo became a locus of activism and complaint – and a backchannel that refuted official reports and has continued to play a key role in more recent events.
Recently a TED video featuring Michael Anti on China’s Censorship seems to be making the rounds. I think Anti does bring some unique insights to the English speaking audience about China that we don’t generally see in Western media; hence his video below:
Imagine there are 500 million internet users in China!
Chinese Equivalent Internet Sites
Google Baidu
Twitter Weibo
FaceBook Renren
YouTube YouKu or TuDou
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