China’s First Twitter Novel

While Twitter remains generally blocked in China, that hasn’t stopped tech-savvy Chinese from putting the microblog platform to creative uses.

This week, influential blogger Lian Yue started publishing a novel on Twitter, believed to be the first time a Chinese-language novel is released on the popular service.

The novel, entitled “2020,” revolves around a character named Mao Zhiyong, described as a pale, overweight middle-aged man, and it will be written in regular installments through the year 2020. In Wednesday’s chapter, the protagonist Mao became a father to twin boys and was promoted to head of the Communist Party propaganda department in the city where he lives.

The author announced plans to start the Twitter novel on his blog late last year. “It will only be available on Twitter,” he wrote. “If you are interested, try getting a Twitter account.”

Even though Twitter– like other foreign social media sites such as YouTube and Facebook– is currently blocked in mainland China, Internet users can find their way around the restrictions by using proxy servers or third-party applications.

Lian Yue is the pen name of Zhong Xiaoyong, a writer and social critic based in the east China city of Xiamen. He has written freelance columns for various Chinese publications and published several books, including “I Love Asking Lian Yue” (in Chinese, 我爱问连岳), a collection based on his “I Am Chicken Soup” column that ran in Shanghai Weekly.

The decision to write a Twitter novel was described in the following terms: “This is like singing in the shower. When you are relaxed, you will entertain yourself; you have the passion to be creative and expressive. Shower singing cannot be public. Those who happen to hear it may suffer. But the guy who’s enjoying himself in the misty bathroom can’t control himself.”

Lian Yue said he plans to write no more than 20 novel-tweets a day and will limit updates to four times a week in order to “avoid the overload of information that both gets on people’s nerves and slows down the work.”

The debut has already caused stirrings of anticipation among China’s active Internet community, with some people setting up new Twitter accounts just to read the popular writer’s work.

To date, Lian Yue has nearly 33,000 followers on Twitter.

– Juliet Ye via

China Daily: GM foods piled on shelves, labeling called upon

Although the typical Chinese kitchen is now likely to have many food ingredients that have been genetically modified (GM), awareness of the issue remains poor among the public, the latest online survey has found.

More than 55 percent of the nearly 1,000 respondents said they had scarce knowledge of GM food, the survey conducted by China Daily and Sohu.com showed last week. At least 52 percent said they were unaware of the prevalence of GM food in their lives.

“Genetically modified products such as papaya, soybean oil, tomatoes and potatoes have been largely available in the country”s market since early 2000,” said Professor Jiang Gaoming of the Chinese Academy of Sciences” Institute of Botany.

As these products are relatively cheaper than non-GM food, people are eating them without being aware of what they are consuming, he said.

A survey conducted by Greenpeace China last year showed a large majority of the papaya sold in major Chinese cities like Beijing and Shanghai was genetically modified.

“Worse, they are not labeled,” Fang Lifeng, spokesman of Greenpeace China’s GM program, told China Daily Wednesday.

In the latest survey, 73 percent of those polled said they would check the GM status of products while shopping for food, while nearly 67 percent said they were unsatisfied with the current level of GM labeling.

“When I shop for soy oil, I always find it hard to spot the GM label, which usually appears in small print,” said food safety-conscious Wang Yi, 31, a white-collar worker in Beijing.

Relating that her mother is unaccustomed to checking on the status of GM food, Wang added: “For her, price is the top concern when choosing food.”

China leads the world in public biotech crop research, experts said.

GM crops in the field trial stage include rice, wheat, corn, soybeans, potatoes, cabbage and tobacco. GM cotton also accounts for 30 percent of the country’s cotton acreage, official statistics showed.

Under such circumstances, public awareness of GM food should be largely improved, particularly its potential negative impact on health and the environment, Fang urged.

“Despite the relatively lower price of GM food, people should be equipped with the knowledge, both positive and negative, when choosing what to eat,” he said.

Internationally, advocacy groups have strongly opposed GM technology being put in the human food chain, citing its unforeseeable impact.

Studies also found GM food damaged laboratory rats fed with these ingredients.

In response to food safety and health concerns, nearly 88 percent of those polled said they would choose traditional food over the GM variety, the latest survey showed.

However, Yang Xiaoguang, a food nutrition expert with the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, thought otherwise.

“GM food is safer than ordinary food in terms of pesticide residue,” he explained.

GM plants are often created to resist disease and eliminate the need for pesticides. Their perceived advantages, such as a hardier texture, higher nutritional value and faster growth, create a type of “superfood,” studies showed.

Worldwide, 70 percent of soy, 46 percent of cotton and 24 percent of corn are genetically modified.

Due to concerns over consumer rights, at least 35 countries and regions including China, Australia, the EU, Japan and Indonesia have adopted mandatory labeling for any product that has been genetically modified.

China’s labeling regulation stipulates that all products containing GM ingredients including seeds, animal feed and food should be labeled under the framework of the Biosafety Regulation of GMOs in Agriculture, first announced in June 2001 by the Ministry of Agriculture.

“The regulation, however, is poorly enforced as many GM products are sold without labeling at all,” Jiang said.

“A lack of strict management and the absence of a monitoring mechanism is largely to blame,” he acknowledged.

Other reasons include the lack of a cost-effective method for detecting GM products with sufficient sensitivity, coupled with business concerns that labeling would result in lower competitiveness, said Professor Wang Canfa of the China University of Political Science and Law.

“Given that GM products like soybean oil, papaya, tomatoes, potatoes and tobacco are now widespread in China, the labeling rule, which is about consumer choice and rights, should be forcefully and strictly implemented,” he said.

He also called on the government to further regulate GM labeling, including having these details prominently displayed on packaging, so consumers could choose whether to buy those items.

[source:china daily]

Google now blames China for search engine outage

Google is now blaming government censorship for a temporary outage of its search engine in mainland China.

Google initially attributed Tuesday’s outage to a technical glitch, a string of text “gs_rfai” that began appearing in Web addresses in the last 24 hours. Because of the characters “rfa,” Chinese filtering systems associated the searches with Radio Free Asia, which is inaccessible in China, the Internet search giant concluded. Google did not say how the string of text was created. Chinese Internet users speculated Tuesday that the addition of the characters triggered the error messages.

But, after an investigation, Google on Tuesday blamed the outage on China’s Internet filtering system.

“It’s clear we actually added this parameter a week ago. So whatever happened today to block Google.com.hk must have been as a result of a change in the Great Firewall,” a Google spokesman said. “Our search traffic in China is now back to normal even though we have not made any changes at our end. We will continue to monitor what is going on, but for the time being this issue seems to be resolved.”

– Jessica Guynn via

Google and China: What You Need to Know

The ongoing battle between Google and China sometimes reads like a spy novel, featuring a giant technology company clashing with a cadre of totalitarian overlords, attacks by hackers apparently aimed at pinpointing citizen activists and dissidents, and grandstanding speeches by senators and congressmen about the Chinese threat. Guardian political columnist and historian Timothy Garton Ash recently called it “a defining story of our time.” Here’s our take on the most recent news and what you really need to know about this epic confrontation. Continue reading ‘Google and China: What You Need to Know’

Google search in China moved to Hongkong

March 23rd, 2010, Google Blog announced a new approach to China, which referred that Google search in China moved to Hongkong. And the article below is a copy posted in Google blog :

On January 12, we announced on this blog that Google and more than twenty other U.S. companies had been the victims of a sophisticated cyber attack originating from China, and that during our investigation into these attacks we had uncovered evidence to suggest that the Gmail accounts of dozens of human rights activists connected with China were being routinely accessed by third parties, most likely via phishing scams or malware placed on their computers. We also made clear that these attacks and the surveillance they uncovered—combined with attempts over the last year to further limit free speech on the web in China including the persistent blocking of websites such as Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Google Docs and Blogger—had led us to conclude that we could no longer continue censoring our results on Google.cn.

So earlier today we stopped censoring our search services—Google Search, Google News, and Google Images—on Google.cn. Users visiting Google.cn are now being redirected to Google.com.hk, where we are offering uncensored search in simplified Chinese, specifically designed for users in mainland China and delivered via our servers in Hong Kong. Users in Hong Kong will continue to receive their existing uncensored, traditional Chinese service, also from Google.com.hk. Due to the increased load on our Hong Kong servers and the complicated nature of these changes, users may see some slowdown in service or find some products temporarily inaccessible as we switch everything over.

Figuring out how to make good on our promise to stop censoring search on Google.cn has been hard. We want as many people in the world as possible to have access to our services, including users in mainland China, yet the Chinese government has been crystal clear throughout our discussions that self-censorship is a non-negotiable legal requirement. We believe this new approach of providing uncensored search in simplified Chinese from Google.com.hk is a sensible solution to the challenges we’ve faced—it’s entirely legal and will meaningfully increase access to information for people in China. We very much hope that the Chinese government respects our decision, though we are well aware that it could at any time block access to our services. We will therefore be carefully monitoring access issues, and have created this new web page, which we will update regularly each day, so that everyone can see which Google services are available in China.

In terms of Google’s wider business operations, we intend to continue R&D work in China and also to maintain a sales presence there, though the size of the sales team will obviously be partially dependent on the ability of mainland Chinese users to access Google.com.hk. Finally, we would like to make clear that all these decisions have been driven and implemented by our executives in the United States, and that none of our employees in China can, or should, be held responsible for them. Despite all the uncertainty and difficulties they have faced since we made our announcement in January, they have continued to focus on serving our Chinese users and customers. We are immensely proud of them.

And there is a Chinese version here.

A Henan Love Story

China — To mark World Water Day today, award-winning photographer Lu Guang has this love story with a tragic ending.

Zhang Yuzhuang village is a small hamlet in China’s northern Henan province of about 2,000 residents.

About 15km upstream is a cluster of factories making paper and chemicals.

In January 2008, two young love-struck villagers, Zhang Qiaoliang and Su Yunxia, were married.

The young couple was very much in love and that September Su Yunxia fell pregnant.

But just a few months later, in January 2009, Qiaoliang found out he had throat cancer.

He was just 25 years old.

But Qiaoliang was optimistic. He felt cured after surgery and he and his wife started looking forward to the birth of their new baby.

Qiaoliang loved to put his ear on his wife’s belly and listen to his unborn child.

But the tumour in his throat came back and by May Qiaoliang was dead.

He never saw his son.

“It makes me really sad to see such a young man and a good husband die so young,” says environmental photographer Lu Guang, who became a friend of the family and took these series of photos.

“But it’s not just Qiaoliang that died.

“In 2008, a 22-year-old mother also died from cancer in the same village.

“In 2007, 47 people died, in 2008, there were 38 people were died and last year 18 died just in the three months from January to March.

“More than 90 percent died from cancer.”

This is the reality of China’s water pollution.

via http://www.greenpeace.org/china/en/news/a-henan-love-story

Publish and be deleted


Douban, a Chinese social networking service website, received $10 million in venture capital from its second round of fundraising on January 25, after raising $2 million in 2006. Photo: CFP

Continue reading ‘Publish and be deleted’

Twitter Will Be Available in China…Someday

Twitter to Chinavia
While most of the world happily enjoys the Internet’s free services such as Twitter, YouTube, Facebook and Google, in China these are either inaccessible or might become so in the following months.

And, as shown by Google’sGoogle recent squabble with the Chinese government, it can be very hard to operate in the world’s most populous country. But Twitter’s Jack Dorsey has faith that TwitterTwitter will be able to operate in China, although it’s currently blocked by the government.

At a New York panel discussion on social media and digital activism, Chinese activist Ai Weiwei asked Dorsey whether he can promise availability of Twitter in China. Dorsey said: “I would say yes. It’s just a matter of time.” Weiwei called this answer “very philosophical”; knowing that a giant like Google has trouble securing its presence in China, a cautious answer like this by a much smaller Twitter instills little confidence.

Weiwei also pointed out a very interesting fact that westerners probably don’t think about: Twitter is a very different tool in Chinese and in English. “At 140 words, in Chinese, you can really write a novel. You can discuss most profound ideas really to democracy, freedom, poetry,” he said. Unfortunately, it seems that this fact didn’t escape Chinese censors, which have been blocking Twitter for nearly a year now.

via http://mashable.com/2010/03/16/twitter-china/

Chinese Net Memes

Here are some Chinese internet memes, as presented by More Suzhou magazine (February/ March 2010 issue):

What, brother, is smoking, is not a cigarette, but loneliness!
(…) gē chōu de bú shì yān, shì jì mò

In July of 2009, someone posted a picture of a guy eating a bowl of noodles on a Baidu forum, and titled it, “What, brother, is eating, isn’t noodles, but loneliness!” After that, it ran out of control. People began to use this sentence on many other occasions, such as, “What, brother, is loving, isn’t you, but loneliness.” And “What, brother, is loving, isn’t beer, but loneliness.” This has become lots of peoples’ signature on MSN, QQ, and other social networking sites. (…)

Jia Junpeng, your mom is calling you to go home to eat!
(…) jiǎ jūn péng nǐ mā mā hǎn nǐ huí jiā chī fàn

Jia Junpeng may or not be a real person but, on July 16th, 2009, an empty post named “Jia Junpeng, your mom is calling you to go home to eat!” appeared on a World of Warcraft forum on Baidu Tieba. It was viewed by 390,617 people in the following few hours, and had over 17,000 replies. By the next day, there were 7,100,000 hits, and 300,000 replies. After that, it became the most popular network greeting online, and had permeated all sectors of society, including the media, who spent a lot of time on in-depth analysis of this quotation. (…)

Out buying soy sauce
(…) wǒ shì lái dǎ jiàng yóu de

It literally means, “I’m just out buying soy sauce.” The phrase took the Chinese Internets by storm in 2007, thanks to a Guangzhou TV news clip of a reporter asking a man on the street his opinion on the Edison Chen sex scandal. The man famously replied: “I don’t give a shit. I’m just out buying soy sauce.” Chinese Internet users have taken up the phrase as a cynical euphemism for “It’s none of my business.” or “Who gives a shit?” (…)

Distraught
(…) xīn shén bù níng

One day on CCTV’s, “Focus Interview,” there was an interview with a college student about how Google doesn’t filter out pornography. He said, “I think the harm of online pornography is particularly large. I have a classmate who used to obsess over dirty porn. He visits those website a lot a lot, he was very distraught for a long time.” So after that, whatever happens, people all say “distraught,” …

[By Philipp Lenssen | Origin: Chinese Net Memes | Comments]

Does Internet Matter in China?

http://www.bullogger.com/blogs/lihuafang/archives/345317.aspx
Does Internet Matter in China?
李华芳 @ 2009-10-16 22:00
Does Internet Matter in China?
Li Huafang

Hu Yong, 2008,?The Rising Cacophony: Personal expression and Public Discussion in the Internet Age, Guangxi Normal University Press. (胡泳,2008,《众声喧哗:网络时代的个人表达与公共讨论》,广西师范大学出版社。)
The paper,?The Internet and Civil Society in China: a preliminary assessment, is Guobin Yang’s pioneering study on the relationship between Internet and politics, which came up with a question that whether Internet has boosted the development of civil society.[1] In another word, what is the relationship between Internet and civil society? Continue reading ‘Does Internet Matter in China?’