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The China Thread

Started by Jacob, September 24, 2012, 05:27:47 PM

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Valmy

Quote from: Barrister on March 27, 2020, 01:39:30 PM
Quote from: Valmy on March 27, 2020, 01:27:39 PM
Not exactly inspiring. This is his chance to show that Trump is a chump and he is the man.

It's called "leading by example".  People are supposed to stay at home - so he's staying at home.

His videos have been pretty good - in particular when compared to a Trump daily briefing. :bleeding:

I suppose. We are just in a position where we really need this dude to win. I have little confidence in him so I want to be reassured :P
Quote"This is a Russian warship. I propose you lay down arms and surrender to avoid bloodshed & unnecessary victims. Otherwise, you'll be bombed."

Zmiinyi defenders: "Russian warship, go fuck yourself."

Eddie Teach

Quote from: Tonitrus on March 27, 2020, 12:46:23 PM
Quote from: Valmy on March 27, 2020, 11:21:57 AM
Quote from: Monoriu on March 27, 2020, 02:24:44 AM
Well, according to Beijing, the virus is a bio-weapon planted in Wuhan by the US military  ;)

Iran is saying the same thing. The US military decided that bio-weapons were pretty inneffective and difficult to control (you know...like not spread to your own country and shit) decades ago so this isn't really something we do anymore. Besides even when we were it was more about temporarily disabling young soldiers not very slowly killing old people...and as it turned out even very sick soldiers defend themselves.

Though, to be fair, that at least makes more sense than Trump claiming this is a media conspiracy to keep him from being re-elected.

Interestingly, so far it seems to be trending to look more helpful in getting him re-elected.  But even he may be surprised by that.

The pandemic has just started. Many of his supporters don't even think it's real. We'll see how things look in a few months.
To sleep, perchance to dream. But in that sleep of death, what dreams may come?

mongers

Quote from: Valmy on March 27, 2020, 01:10:58 PM
Quote from: mongers on March 27, 2020, 12:48:39 PM

I wonder it they'll re-purposing the FEMA death camps BS into something like 'Democrat state temp hospitals are a cover for exterminations camps for Trump patriots'?

See? You don't even live here and yet you know exactly what the story will be if we start having large numbers of deaths.

:blush:
"We have it in our power to begin the world over again"

Syt

So China is trying to clamp down on otherwise very wholeseome game Animal Crossing: New Horizons:

https://www.eurogamer.net/articles/2020-04-11-china-bans-sale-of-animal-crossing-new-horizons-after-it-becomes-a-haven-for-hong-kong-protesters

QuoteChina bans sale of Animal Crossing: New Horizons after it becomes a haven for Hong Kong protesters

China is taking on Animal Crossing: New Horizons, blocking its sale on the country's version of ebay.

The Chinese authorities have yet to approve the phenomenally popular Nintendo Switch exclusive for official release, so fans were importing directly from ebay-style websites such as Taobao and Pinduoduo, or buying it digitally by switching their Switch eShop region.

Now, Taobao and Pinduoduo have pulled the game at the request of the Chinese authorities. But why? According to Daniel Ahmad, a senior analyst at Niko Partners who specialises in the Asian video game industry, it's down to two things: Animal Crossing is being used by Hong Kong protesters and others to create politically sensitive user-generated content, and it's a smash hit on social media.

As reported by our friends at US Gamer, Animal Crossing: New Horizons is fast becoming a new way for Hong Kong protesters to fight for democracy amid the Coronavirus lockdown.

Under Chinese law, video games can't contain anything that "threatens China's national unity, sovereignty, or territorial integrity". They can't harm "the nation's reputation, security or interests". They can't promote cults, or "superstitions". They can't "incite obscenity, drug use, violence or gambling" - although loot boxes are, of course, fine - and they can't include anything that "harms public ethics" or China's "culture and traditions". They also can't include any "other content" that might violate China's constitution or law, whatever that may be, and they have to be published in China by a Chinese company.

Despite forcing some online retailers to pull Animal Crossing: New Horizons from their virtual shelves, the Chinese authorities face an uphill struggle banning the game completely. As Ahmad points out, Animal Crossing still works offline and online in China, and it's still available to buy, either from certain stores, or via switching region on the eShop. And people can always contact Taobao sellers privately and buy the game under the counter.

Animal Crossing: New Horizons is a remarkable hit globally, and it seems Chinese gamers are determined to play it. That comes as no surprise, given they've been playing unapproved video games for years. For more on that, check out Chris Tapsell's wonderful investigative feature, Video games in China: beyond the great firewall.


But if that's a concern, surely they would have to ban all online games that permit online chat?
I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein's brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops.
—Stephen Jay Gould

Proud owner of 42 Zoupa Points.

Josquius

QuoteBut if that's a concern, surely they would have to ban all online games that permit online chat?
Sounds like a good tactic for those looking to build distaste towards the government.
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Sheilbh

Wasn't there an article recently about some library in Minecraft that includes all sorts of content that's being censored?
Let's bomb Russia!

Monoriu

The HK dude who posted the forbidden messages and caused the whole game to be shut down is now receiving death threats from affected Mainland players  :lol:

Syt

https://edition.cnn.com/2020/04/14/asia/nnevvy-china-taiwan-twitter-intl-hnk/index.html

QuoteNnevvy: Chinese troll campaign on Twitter exposes a potentially dangerous disconnect with the wider world

Hong Kong (CNN)At first, it seemed like a straightforward Chinese internet controversy.

After Thai actor Vachirawit Chivaaree liked a photo on Twitter that listed Hong Kong as a "country," Chinese fans inundated his Instagram and other social media with comments "correcting" him, and he soon posted an apology for his "lack of caution talking about Hong Kong," which is a semi-autonomous Chinese city, and not an independent nation.

Vachirawit, who goes by the name "Bright," was not the first foreign celebrity or brand to cause offense in China by mischaracterizing issues related to Hong Kong or Taiwan, or by crossing numerous other political red lines familiar to those within China's Great Firewall.

Nor was he the first to try to apologize, only to have more alleged transgressions dredged up by nationalist Chinese web users looking for a new scalp.

For years, Chinese internet nationalists have leapfrogged the Great Firewall to go after the country's critics on banned social media sites like Facebook and Twitter. They've attacked pages run by the Taiwanese government, pro-Uyghur groups, and businesses deemed to have offended China, inundating them with abusive posts and clogging up their timelines.

Following Vachirawit's apology, comments from users on Weibo, a Chinese social media platform, found additional posts by him they disapproved of, as well as comments by his girlfriend, who goes by the name Nnevvy online, in which she appeared to endorse Taiwanese independence (or at least that the island was distinct from mainland China).

They called for a boycott of Vachirawit and his TV show, "2gether," and some began posting attacks against his girlfriend on both Weibo and Twitter under the hashtag #nnevvy.

On the Chinese platform, the hashtag attracted more than 1.4 million posts, and some 4 billion views, according to the Global Times, a state-backed tabloid. "There is no such thing as an idol when it comes to the important matters of our country," the paper quoted one popular post stating.

The expression of similar sentiments on Twitter were met with pushback by Thai fans, who quickly found themselves targeted by the Chinese users, who posted insults demeaning the southeast Asian country and its government. But here the users, used to debating within the limits of the Great Firewall, revealed something of how limited their political worldview is by censorship and propaganda.

In seeking to insult the Thais they were arguing with, they turned to the worst topics they could imagine, but instead of outrage, posts criticizing the Thai government or dredging up historical controversies, were met with glee by the mostly young, politically liberal Thais on Twitter.

"Say it louder!" read one post, after trolls shared photos of the Thammasat University massacre, in which government troops opened fire on leftist student protesters in 1976. Other Thais posted memes laughing at the futility of Chinese trolls attempting to insult them by attacking a government they themselves spend most of their time criticizing.

Hong Kong and Taiwanese posters soon joined in, with former Hong Kong lawmaker Nathan Law writing, "so funny watching the pro-CCP (Chinese Communist Party) online army trying to attack Bright. They think every Thai person must be like them, who love Emperor Xi (Chinese President Xi Jinping). What they don't understand is that Bright's fans are young and progressive, and the pro-CCP army always make the wrong attacks."

As of Tuesday, the #nnevvy hashtag is now overwhelmingly dominated by anti-China posts, as is #China, despite apparent efforts to flood it with positive content about the country. Even on Weibo, most recent posts are from users discussing the failure of the "expedition" with some poking fun at the "little pinks," as nationalist, pro-Communist Party trolls are known online.

While all this may seem petty and inconsequential, the failure of this particular trolling campaign is illustrative of a wider issue. The attitude expressed by the angry "little pinks" engaging in it, an easily offended, touchy nationalism that links love for country with love of the Communist Party and its leaders, has grown substantially in recent years, drowning out -- with the assistance of the censors -- what limited criticism there was of the government on the Chinese internet.

This type of groupthink could have potential real world consequences down the line. While China's leaders do not need to worry about public opinion in the same as their counterparts in a democracy, they cannot ignore it entirely. On issues such as pollution, corruption and food safety, public opinion has had a notable effect on government policy, even as the censors worked to ensure that people did not escalate their online dissatisfaction to offline protests.

However, in the past the authorities have seen patriotic anger run out of their control.

In 2012, large-scale violent anti-Japanese riots broke out in several Chinese cities over a dispute between Beijing and Japan over ownership of the Senkaku Islands, which China calls the Diaoyu Islands, in the East China Sea. Four years later, after a ruling in Manila's favor at the Hague over territorial claims in the South China Sea, protesters targeted Filipino and US businesses, and demanded the government take military action
.

In both instances, intense policing both online and off was able to rein in the protests, but it also exposed the government to a level of public anger they were not used to for not giving in to calls for a more belligerent response to either Japan or the Philippines.

With Hong Kong too, nationalist sentiment fostered by Beijing has in the past created something of a feedback loop. During intense and often violent anti-government protests in the semi-autonomous city last year, Chinese state media emphasized the most extreme elements of the movement and pushed conspiracies about foreign interference.

This led to calls from many online in mainland China for the Chinese military to intervene.

When the Hong Kong government instead gave in to some of the protesters' demands, it was to the understandable shock of many in China whose view of the unrest had been shaped by state media. This led to a backlash against Beijing, with some online asking the obvious question of why Hong Kong protesters, which state media had persistently referred to as rioters, could win concessions?


A similar level of disconnect and anger was seen when pro-democracy parties won big in local elections in Hong Kong, despite the confident predictions of state media and other voices on the Chinese internet that the city's population would reject them.

In both instances, just as the #nnevvy trolls were unable to conceive of anyone not being offended by having their government mocked, the limits of political imagination had been constrained by censorship and propaganda.

While some Hong Kongers and Taiwanese were crowing over the embarrassment of the Chinese trolls, they shouldn't be too complacent about the potential ramifications for any future debate over either territory's sovereignty.

If China's leaders one day find themselves painted into a corner by their own propaganda, unable to pursue or even consider more pragmatic solutions, the results could be potentially disastrous.
I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein's brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops.
—Stephen Jay Gould

Proud owner of 42 Zoupa Points.

Josquius

Quote from: Sheilbh on April 15, 2020, 08:36:55 AM
Wasn't there an article recently about some library in Minecraft that includes all sorts of content that's being censored?
I remember that. I wonder if Minecraft got banned out of it?

Step 1: Find out what games are popular in dictatorships.
Step 2: Post anti dictatorship stuff in the game.
Step 3: Watch as unrest builds in the dictatorship by a teensy bit.
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garbon

Quote from: Monoriu on April 15, 2020, 08:55:21 AM
The HK dude who posted the forbidden messages and caused the whole game to be shut down is now receiving death threats from affected Mainland players  :lol:

The Chinese government caused the game to be shut down.

And, of course, you would find death threats against someone else's life funny.
"I've never been quite sure what the point of a eunuch is, if truth be told. It seems to me they're only men with the useful bits cut off."

I drank because I wanted to drown my sorrows, but now the damned things have learned to swim.

Eddie Teach

I dunno, it is kind of funny to think of some commie/fascist/nationalist guy nerd raging because the government he supports won't let him play his game anymore.
To sleep, perchance to dream. But in that sleep of death, what dreams may come?

Monoriu

The milk tea alliance.  This term or meme arises from the recent and ongoing internet war between Thais and Mainland Chinese.  A lot of HKers and Taiwanese joined the internet war on the side of the Thais. 



Because Hong Kong, Taiwan and Thailand all have our unique and well-known recipes for milk tea. 

Hong Kong - tea leaves are mixed, and female stockings are used as a filter.  The result is a bitter but smooth milk tea.

Taiwan - first they love putting small and glutinous rice balls in the milk tea.  Then they have infinite numbers of combinations, e.g. all kinds of fruit flavours etc.

Thai - they have a unique, instantly recognisible orange colour and aroma for their milk teas. 

Legbiter

Interesting. May the Tripartite Alliance troll the wumaos into submission.  :thumbsup:
Posted using 100% recycled electrons.

Josquius

Female stockings?
As opposed to male ones?
You mean actual kinky stockings are used? That sounds... Wasteful.
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Monoriu

Quote from: Tyr on April 16, 2020, 03:29:08 AM
Female stockings?
As opposed to male ones?
You mean actual kinky stockings are used? That sounds... Wasteful.

They use the stockings as a filter.