How the Chinese Government Fabricates Social Media Posts for Strategic Distraction, Not Engaged Argument
Harvard University Press · Stanford University · +1 more institution
Abstract
The Chinese government has long been suspected of hiring as many as 2 million people to surreptitiously insert huge numbers of pseudonymous and other deceptive writings into the stream of real social media posts, as if they were the genuine opinions of ordinary people. Many academics, and most journalists and activists, claim that these so-called 50c party posts vociferously argue for the government’s side in political and policy debates. As we show, this is also true of most posts openly accused on social media of being 50c. Yet almost no systematic empirical evidence exists for this claim or, more importantly, for the Chinese regime’s strategic objective in pursuing this activity. In the first large-scale…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 245.86
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 72
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Censorship
- Argument (complex analysis)
- Government (linguistics)
- Communism
- Political science
- China
- Politics
- Social media
- Peace, Justice and strong institutions