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China’s State – Sponsored Tweeters & Their Paid Tweets

chanikya

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On December 9, 2011, Radio Free Asia, funded by the US State Department, disseminated a report attributed to the Agence France Presse (AFP) regarding how China has been trying to counter criticism of the State and the Communist Party of China and spread of undesirable “rumours” through the Internet by micro-bloggers and other netizens.

2. The text of the AFP report as disseminated by the Radio station is given below:

China’s Online Propagandists Revealed

A pair of leaked receipts from a university in northwestern China that apparently shows the pay given to government-backed Internet commentators, known as the “50 cent army,” has been circulating among netizens this week.

Sealed with the official stamp of “The Party Committee Propaganda Department of the Northwestern Polytechnic University of the Chinese Communist Party,” the receipts confirm that money was paid to “Internet commentators.”

An employee who answered the phone at the Xian-based University confirmed that such a job exists on campus.

“You mean a propaganda specialist,” he said, when asked if there was such a job as “Internet commentator” at the college.

But he said he didn’t know much about the job, and supplied a second phone number for more information.

The employee who answered this number also confirmed the job exists.

“Of course we do,” he said. “The job is to write news … for example, they might use their knowledge of scholarly articles.”

“With editorial input from the team, they can produce something of great value,” he said.

However, he hung up when pressed for further details.

China is stepping up media training for its officials, as well as an army of freelance commentators paid to direct public debate online, known as the “50 cent army,” according to official media reports in recent months.

A news report from local television station, Hubei Xishui TV, said local officials from the Xishui county propaganda department had held training exercises for official spokespersons and “Internet commentators.”

Media training courses for commentators and government officials include tips on how to influence coverage by the country’s biggest news organizations, as well as numerous methods of using the Internet and social media to spread the government’s message.

Internet commentators are expected to report “the truth” as fast as possible, to supplement their information with explanations for events, and to influence Internet debate in the “correct” direction, reports have said.

Veteran bloggers and online activists say that a typical workday for a 50-center would involve watching forum posts, microblog posts, and chatrooms for topics linked to a specific keyword allocated by their managers.

How much they are paid depends on the number of comments, tweets, and posts they make that steer the debate in the government’s preferred direction.

According to the receipts currently circulating, which had the personal details of the 50-centers obscured, two commentaries were paid for by the university, one at 20 yuan, and one at 30 yuan.

The world of the government-backed online commentators is shadowy, with ordinary netizens left to infer how they operate from their behavior online or from the occasional leaked document.

Earlier this year, the news website Canyu leaked a document titled “Internal Work Handbook” allegedly written for 50-centers.

In it, hired commentators are instructed to track down the source of any online “rumors,” and then to order the website that first posted it to delete the offending item.

One Chinese student who declined to be named said he had once written articles for the government online, to earn a little extra money.

“I saw that my classmates were doing it as well, and I didn’t think anything of it,” he said. “I didn’t know that we were the so-called ‘50 cent army.’”

“I didn’t really understand what I was doing, and I was somewhat lacking in values,” he said. “Now I deeply regret going out to bat for them with comments like that.”

He said he was able to earn around 100-120 yuan a month writing the articles.

Chinese Internet expert Li Li said that while the 50 cent army appears to be growing in numbers, their effectiveness is limited.

“If you do a lot of bad things, you will lose credibility … and eventually no one will believe anything you say,” Li said.

“Then there will be a backlash; everyone will know who the 50 cent army are, and the government’s credibility will be at its lowest possible level.”

Blogger Wen Yunchao, known by his online nickname Beifeng, said most netizens adopted a policy of ignoring 50-centers.

“We pretend we don’t hear or see them,” he said. “We treat them as if they weren’t there, and never give any kind of reaction.”

“This makes them much less effective.”

Chennai Centre for China Studies » China
 
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Everyone knows about this. Chinese internet propagandists are rampant. Paid by the PRC government to spread lies, fabricate information, impersonate foreign nationalities or stir up trouble. Some even resort to hacking. Say anything unfavorable about China on any major forum and you'll be bombarded with ad hominem attacks. Take the Tibet issue for instance. Pretty much everyone I know who isn't Chinese is against the brutalization of the Tibetan people by the Chinese government. Yet whenever you go online, you find drone after drone favoring the PRC on the Tibet issue. It makes no sense considering most western sites are banned in China. Read this if you want to be disgusted-

China’s web spin doctors spread subversive propaganda | memeburn

Its pathetic that these folks would rather pay people to create fake stories than actually trying to improve living standards.
They even make up stupid rumors about Koreans trying to steal Confucius and Chinese characters. These fabricated rumors are printed by Chinese government newspapers. Nothing but lies.

National sentiment controlled by rumors | ChinaHush

These lies have been integrated so deep into the Chinese mainstream that the even folks with little access to the internet or TV still believe them. Its disgusting.
 
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"Radio Free Asia, funded by the US State Department,"

LOL!

This says all!

If US can do state sponsored propaganda, Why can't China do?

Are you fools?

Use your freeking brains. This stuff is created by God to think, not just to eat!
 
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Very good news we need more 50cents army the more the merrier i would say, well done to CPC
 
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Tbh, having visited China myself, this news doesn't surprise me. There are some very shady things happening in that country.

TBH judging by your previous posts (where you mentioned china police every where on street listen to people, sorry mate i just went to bj several times even pass from sensitive areas such as defence department and i couldnt spot a police man any where)on china i doubted very much you been to china so stop lying here.
 
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I don't see any 'surprises' around here :D . Everyone seems to be well aware of these paid jobs. :D
 
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