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The China Thread

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

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garbon

Quote from: Ed Anger on June 27, 2014, 09:39:47 AM
Quote from: garbon on June 27, 2014, 08:39:34 AM
Where's my luxury vacation, Obama? :angry:

You get to visit the Florida Panhandle. The sweaty redneck panhandle.

You could have stopped at just that. After ally, I said luxury vacation. :yuk:

That said - closeted Repubs? Let's go! :w00t:
"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

Quote from: Ed Anger on June 27, 2014, 09:39:47 AM
You get to visit the Florida Panhandle. The sweaty redneck panhandle.

Like the eastern part of the state is any better.
To sleep, perchance to dream. But in that sleep of death, what dreams may come?

Syt

Quote from: Ed Anger on June 27, 2014, 09:39:47 AM
Quote from: garbon on June 27, 2014, 08:39:34 AM
Where's my luxury vacation, Obama? :angry:

You get to visit the Florida Panhandle. The sweaty redneck panhandle.

That's where one of my sisters lives. :)

She's proudly identifying with redneckicity. :(
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.

jimmy olsen

Maybe they'll respond by naming the street outside our embassy after Snowden? :hmm:

http://news.nationalpost.com/2014/06/26/washington-is-renaming-the-street-outside-chinas-embassy-after-jailed-dissident-liu-xiaobo-and-china-is-furious/

QuoteWashington is renaming the street outside China's embassy after jailed dissident Liu Xiaobo — and China is furious

SHANGHAI — China has reacted with fury to plans to rename the street outside its Washington embassy in honour of its most famous political dissident.

Earlier this week, a U.S. congressional committee voted to change the Chinese embassy's address to "Liu Xiaobo Plaza" — a tribute to the literary critic and dissident who has been in prison since 2009 for organizing a "subversive" pro-democracy petition called Charter 08.

The name change was "a way to highlight Liu's unjust imprisonment," said a statement posted on the website of Frank Wolf, the Republican congressman behind the initiative.

The move enraged China. "We believe that the U.S. people will not like to see a U.S. street be named after a criminal," a spokesman for the Chinese embassy was quoted as saying by the Washington Post.

Friends, relations and supporters of Mr. Liu celebrated the initiative, which was timed to coincide with this month's 25th anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests, in which he played a central role. Xia Yeliang, a Chinese academic, said Liu Xia, the dissident's wife who herself has been under house arrest since 2010, had shown enthusiasm after he told her of the vote by telephone.

"She immediately laughed, a very loud laugh, a joyful laugh," Prof. Xia said.

He added that he had asked her to pass the message on to Liu Xiabo, but that the telephone line had gone dead. Liu Xiaobo was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in absentia in 2010, and Prof Xia said he saw it as a tribute to all of those who protested and lost their lives in 1989.

It is far better for the truth to tear my flesh to pieces, then for my soul to wander through darkness in eternal damnation.

Jet: So what kind of woman is she? What's Julia like?
Faye: Ordinary. The kind of beautiful, dangerous ordinary that you just can't leave alone.
Jet: I see.
Faye: Like an angel from the underworld. Or a devil from Paradise.
--------------------------------------------
1 Karma Chameleon point

Josquius

Hurray for international trolling.
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The Brain

QuoteLiu Xiaobo was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize

So he hasn't actually done anything good yet? Thanks Obama.
Women want me. Men want to be with me.

jimmy olsen

 :hmm:

http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/d72ec42a-2f87-11e4-83e4-00144feabdc0.html#axzz3BoXMoz00

Quote'Brushing' casts doubt on Alibaba figures as $20bn IPO looms


After four years managing a private delivery company in the Chinese city of Ningbo, Chen Qian has acquired a new skill: he can tell which packets are fake even before he picks them up. Some are hollow boxes, some rattle with a piece of candy or a keychain. Recently, he says, merchants sending fake deliveries have started putting toilet paper rolls to give some heft.

Mr Chen says these account for about a quarter of the 4,000 packages his company handles every day. The phenomenon is widespread throughout China; a consequence of the country's booming e-commerce industry and, specifically, a practice known as shuaxiaoliang, or literally – "sales brushing". Online sellers are recruiting their friends, relatives and even professional fraudsters to make fake orders because shipping more goods would give them better placement – and therefore a better chance to garner more real sales – on websites such as Alibaba-owned Taobao.

In some category of goods, fake sales can account for between a 10th to a quarter of all online sales, according to a series of interviews with ecommerce vendors, logistics companies, and people who help fake internet traffic for e-commerce sellers.

This high proportion calls into question the key operational metrics published by Alibaba ahead of its expected New York listing this month, when it is likely to raise around $20bn and eclipse Facebook and Google to become the biggest ever internet IPO.

Since Alibaba's Tmall and Taobao sites account for 80 per cent of the overall online retail volume in China, "brushing" also calls into doubt China's official e-commerce statistics.

Alibaba said in a filing to the Securities and Exchanges Commission this week that it handled $296bn worth of goods, consisting of 14.5bn orders, in the year ended June 30. Ebay handled $81bn worth of goods over the same period.

Alibaba noted in the risk factors section of its prospectus that sellers on its site may "engage in fictitious or phantom transactions with themselves or collaborators in order to artificially inflate their own ratings on our marketplaces, reputation and search results rankings".
The company declined to comment further due to a pre-IPO silent period, but Alibaba has been cracking down on brushing for the last three years. This has had some effect, according to sellers and others active on Taoboao, although the practice still flourishes as sellers stay ahead of Alibaba's audit methodology.

Brushing highlights the headaches of policing third parties on e-commerce sites and applies not just to Alibaba but to all sites that have open supplier platforms, such as Ebay and Amazon. However, Alibaba is most affected due to its sheer size in the Chinese market, and because fierce competition and rising advertising rates charged by Alibaba mean that the vast majority of sellers on Taobao are now lossmaking. Ebay and Amazon declined to comment.

Zhang Yi, chief executive of iMedia Research, a mobile internet consulting group, said a private study by his group reckons that a very large number of shop owners on Alibaba's flagship ecommerce site Taobao, which accounts for two-thirds of Alibaba's total sales volume, "brushed" in the first half of 2014. "The great majority are brushing or have 'brushed' at some point" he said.

"We've only started brushing recently," said one Taobao shop owner in Hangzhou which sells hats and traditional silk scarves, who asked not to be identified. "There is no other choice for us. A lot of the other shops have been doing this for years, and we realised that no matter how well we did in sales, we could not compete with those who brushed. The way I see it, it would be best for all of us if nobody brushed."
BRUSHING: HOW IT WORKS

Brushing has generated a whole series of side industries in China, including businesses that thrive by artificially boosting online traffic to Taobao and Tmall shops.

"But the competition is so fierce, there is really no other way, all our competitors are doing it. If your sales aren't high enough, you will get low placement and no sales"

There is some disagreement over the extent to which brushing affects Alibaba's overall sales numbers. One person familiar with the company said Alibaba was aware of the problem but did not consider it material enough to impact overall sales.

However Anne Stevenson-Yang, head of J Capital Research, the Beijing based economic research group, drew attention to the 63 per cent jump in Alibaba's gross merchandise value between the end of 2012 and end 2013, from $157bn to $248bn.

In that same period, she says, there was only a 6 per cent revenue growth for all retailers listed on the Shanghai, Shenzhen, and Hong Kong stock exchanges, not corrected for mergers and non-core investments.

"You can't say this is channel migration, because a lot of the consumer/retail companies have very robust online sales, and those sales are growing more slowly than offline sales" she says. "Manufacturers of products sold online are seeing slow or negative growth. So where are all these online sales coming from?"

Over the past three years, Alibaba has improved its auditing procedures, which use algorithms to determine suspicious activity. Merchants caught brushing could be downgraded or even kicked off the website.

Mr Chen, of the delivery company, told the FT via telephone that the number of empty packages he handles has been reduced from half to one-quarter of the total in that time. However, the practice still flourishes as sellers stay ahead of Alibaba's audit methodology. In chat rooms and blog forums, vendors discuss how not to get caught: do not have too high a conversion ratio of sales to internet traffic clicks, and do not "brush" from the same IP address too often.

Li Siyuan, who sells cut flowers online on Taobao from his Beijing flat, said he personally does not brush sales, however he knows many merchants who do, but the practice is declining. "The golden age of brushing was 2009 to 2011" he said. Nowadays he estimates that the total amount of fake sales in the online flower industry is 10 per cent or less. "Today the best way to get high sales is to offer a great product," he adds.

But Mr Chen, of the delivery company, says it will be difficult to completely eradicate the practice. "Even though our employees can pretty much tell which ones are empty, the line is still rather blurry," he says. "Our clients can insist that they just intend to send a pack tissue paper; or even harder still, if they send out a receipt in an envelope."

It appears that brushing violates no laws and, arguably, benefits everyone – store owners get better listings, logistics and delivery companies get more sales, and Alibaba gets a boost in traffic.

"I don't think I want to criticise the practice too much because we get so many sales," says Mr Chen.

Brushing: how it works

'Brushing' essentially consists of creating fake orders – the merchant sends out an empty box or delivery envelope accordingly, but refunds the money paid by the 'purchaser'.

The practice of shipping an empty box or entering a fake order code is necessary because Alibaba requires a unique delivery code to be entered with each order.

In practice, Chen Xujie, a man from Wenzhou who fakes internet traffic for ecommerce sellers on his website 668shua.com, says half of the fakery is done by shipping empty parcels, and half is done via a grey market in active order codes sold by logistics companies to vendors via specialised websites.

Brushing has generated a whole series of side industries in China. Mr Chen, for example, runs a thriving business in artificially boosting online traffic to Taobao and Tmall shops. Shop owners who brush but do not also fake their traffic numbers can get caught because they would appear to be too successful, which casts suspicion and can cause them to be automatically downgraded by Taobao.

Some sellers also use virtual private networks on computers to fake different IP addresses for order locations, he said.
Going by the online chat handle of "Stupid Jerk", Mr Chen uses internet bots and software to fake traffic. "Nine out of every 10 sites on Taobao do it" he said via instant messenger.

He claims to make Rmb3,000 per month generating fake traffic for Taobao sellers, and says he got into the practice after owning a shop on Taobao selling Korean cosmetics. He left Taobao because he said "there was no hope".

"I spent too much time brushing my sales and it still wasn't enough".
It is far better for the truth to tear my flesh to pieces, then for my soul to wander through darkness in eternal damnation.

Jet: So what kind of woman is she? What's Julia like?
Faye: Ordinary. The kind of beautiful, dangerous ordinary that you just can't leave alone.
Jet: I see.
Faye: Like an angel from the underworld. Or a devil from Paradise.
--------------------------------------------
1 Karma Chameleon point

Sheilbh

Anyone got any book recommendations on the current leadership generation of the CCP? Or roughly post-Deng CCP leadership?
Let's bomb Russia!

jimmy olsen

It is far better for the truth to tear my flesh to pieces, then for my soul to wander through darkness in eternal damnation.

Jet: So what kind of woman is she? What's Julia like?
Faye: Ordinary. The kind of beautiful, dangerous ordinary that you just can't leave alone.
Jet: I see.
Faye: Like an angel from the underworld. Or a devil from Paradise.
--------------------------------------------
1 Karma Chameleon point

Tonitrus


Monoriu


CountDeMoney

Quote from: Monoriu on October 13, 2014, 09:03:02 PM
Presumably those diplomats can stay in other hotels?

Would you?

Admiral Yi

Biscuit said the rooms in the Waldorf aren't that great.

Eddie Teach

Quote from: CountDeMoney on October 13, 2014, 09:08:20 PM
Quote from: Monoriu on October 13, 2014, 09:03:02 PM
Presumably those diplomats can stay in other hotels?

Would you?

Only if they have 5 stars. #Monoisrich
To sleep, perchance to dream. But in that sleep of death, what dreams may come?

Monoriu

Quote from: Peter Wiggin on October 13, 2014, 09:37:27 PM
Quote from: CountDeMoney on October 13, 2014, 09:08:20 PM
Quote from: Monoriu on October 13, 2014, 09:03:02 PM
Presumably those diplomats can stay in other hotels?

Would you?

Only if they have 5 stars. #Monoisrich

My experience is that stars mean nothing.  5 stars just mean they have (probably) fulfilled a checklist of requirements, like having a pool, each room has its own toilet, etc.  Doesn't say if the room is nice or big or modern.  Doesn't say if the food or staff are good.  A lot of 5 star places are crappy, and a lot places with fewer stars are much better.