Cyberspace Administration of China
Protests in China succeed! Shanghai and Guangzhou lift the lockdown in a flash
Guangzhou City, Guangdong Province, and Zhengzhou City, Henan Province, announced the "temporary control areas" removal in some areas. Suddenly Shanghai announced on November 30 that from December 1, lockdowns in 24 high-risk areas in the city would be lifted. The outside world believes that the authorities announced the lifting of ...
Chinese Communist Party goes on the hunt for e-commerce companies
According to the Chinese Communist Party's (CCP) digital platform, Jing Daily: "The new regulation aims to give netizens power over what online preferences they see online." This will affect companies whose management model includes excessive reliance on predicting preferences, as there are such as Douyin, with 600 million users, or Taobao, ...
Former employee reveals ‘dirty work’ he did for Chinese regime
When we talk about censorship in China, we usually see the problem in a general way, thinking how the CCP uses electronic systems, software, surveillance cameras, and artificial intelligence, to carry it out. But we forget that it is not only technology. Behind it there are hundreds of thousands of ...
New censorship mechanisms in social networks under the CCP. How much further can it go?
China's Internet control agency presented a new project that will strengthen control of social networks requiring that all comments be reviewed before being published, which generated significant controversy and fear of possible new censorship measures. The package of measures also hides other critical points that are causing a lot of controversies. ...
Chinese concerned about their information environment becoming like North Korea’s
Recently, the Cyberspace Administration of China has issued a new regulation requiring the identity verification of the people who comment online and to "review the messages and screenshots before posting." Commentators believe this is the China Communist Party's further restriction of social media. On June 17th, the Cyberspace Administration of China ...
Beijing fines and requires Twitter-like giant Weibo to self-censor
Beijing recently accused the Chinese Twitter-like social network Sina Weibo of repeatedly posting and transmitting illegal information. As a result, the authority has repeatedly fined Weibo and ordered the social media giant to correct and strengthen information censorship. After being fined, Sina Weibo's stock price fell to a new low at ...
Chinese Communist Party further limits freedom of expression on social networks
The Chinese Communist Party is expanding its anti-free speech policies after requiring bloggers and other online users to have credentials to publish content related to political issues. The move ordered by the Cyberspace Administration of China came in connection with the activity of political writer Ma Xiaolin, who frequently wrote about ...

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