Censorship in China
Despite not hearing much about China’s social media landscape, it is undeniable that it holds a major presence in China and large importance on Chinese citizens. China’s major social media channel Qzone, has about 200 million – 300 shy off Facebook users in the US. China’s large social media presence influenced the largest e-commerce market in 2014, topping America’s 200-billion-dollar e-comm market. However, despite having a large social media presence and lots of social media users, China’s censorship laws have been responsible for inhibiting citizens access to information in past times.
China is no stranger to strict online censorship. The Golden Shield Project (also known as ‘The Great Firewall of China’), originally implemented in 2000 began on the aim of creating a sophisticated database of all Chinese citizens personal information to improve the security of the nation. Since then, The Great Firewall of China and other censorship laws have seen that Facebook, Google, YouTube and other major social media channels to be blocked.
Granted, this sort of censorship does seem harsh to an outsider, sitting at home reading this blog from their MacBook Air, whilst listening to music and Facebook open on another tab. But it’s not all bad for China, they still have social media that’s actually pretty sophisticated and stuff us westerners should actually be jealous of. Baidu, Weibo, WeChat, QQ and Youku are all social media platforms that are similar to western social media channels that offer 1 to 1 communication, content sharing and other means of communication. Qzone, a popular Chinese social media platform, allows users to modify their profiles with pretty colours and unique themes, making them stand out from other profiles. I don’t know about you, but this is pretty cool. China doesn’t have it so bad; they can still communicate with each other.
Thanks MDA20009 you’ve been a blast! 🚀












