The Internet in China: Online Business, Information, Distribution, and Social Connectivity
The Internet in China: Online Business, Information, Distribution, and Social Connectivity
The Internet in China: Online Business, Information, Distribution, and Social Connectivity
The Internet in China: Online business, information, distribution, and social connectivity
E-mail: Min.Jiang@uncc.edu
Telephone: 1-704-687-2826
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Abstract
Internet events refer to public events where large numbers of netizens participate in often
unorganized, autonomous online efforts to express their sentiments and opinions, address
420 million Internet users and 200 million bloggers, Internet events occur often and have
the potential to rally public opinion, pressure government, and reshape China’s public life.
The article outlines the major actors (who), issues (what), causes (why), places (where),
Internet events refer to public events where large numbers of netizens participate in often
unorganized, autonomous online efforts to express their sentiments and opinions, address
collective needs, or influence public opinion and policy. The popularity of Internet events,
otherwise known as new media events, online public incidents, or online collective
incidents in China (Qiu & Chen 2009), has grown considerably over the last decade that
parallels the rise of online public opinion and the surge of Internet population in China.
In an authoritarian country of 420 million Internet users and 200 million bloggers
(CNNIC, 2010; SCIO 2010), Internet events occur often as netizens seek alternative
Sun Zhigang in 2003 symbolizes for many the power of Chinese public opinion as
custody detained for failing to carry proper identification papers. Online fury and
sympathy eventually resulted in the abolition of the “Custody and Repatriation” system.
Although few Internet events produced victorious institutional changes as did the
Sun Zhigang case, they have left indelible marks on public consciousness and remained
part of public memory. In fact, Internet events are such an indispensible part of Chinese
Internet that the government and web companies have been polling netizens on the most
influential events in the past few years to gauge public opinion. The latest poll, conducted
million netizen votes, carrying Eluding the Cat to the top (People’s Daily 2010a). This
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article outlines the major actors (who), issues (what), causes (why), places (where), and
mass media organizations that have a profound impact on audience experiences and
knowledge (Dayan & Katz 1992). With the ever expanding use of the Internet and digital
devices, however, the means of reporting are increasingly in the hands of common people
to produce new media events (Qiu & Chen 2009) and reshape public life.
of Internet events as state-dominated mainstream media often fail to cover certain events
for fear of triggering public anger and social unrest. In particular, a small number of
citizen journalists have taken upon the task of collecting and distributing news of public
interest. Zola (nickname of prominent Chinese citizen journalist Zhou Shuguang), for
instance, became known for his online coverage of the “coolest nail house” story that
exposed the plight of two Sichuan home owners in defiance of wealthy developers.
Besides the growth of citizen journalism that uncovers and amplifies public voices, many
Chinese journalists who work for state media now blog, under real or pseudo names, and
manage to publish stories otherwise censored by official news outlets (MacKinnon 2008).
netizens who actively seek information and post comments. It is reported 66 percent of
Chinese netizens frequently post comments via various news websites, BBS forums, and
real-time online chats (SCIO 2010), making Chinese Internet a space of rising cacophony
(Hu 2008) where controversial issues can rise to the top and become prominent Internet
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events. The State Online Public Opinion Monitor Office (People’s Daily 2009b) reported
in 2009, 23 out of 77 influential social issues emerged from online to set public agenda.
Chinese Internet events cover a wide range of issues. Yang (2009) divides such events
into seven major categories: 1) popular nationalism, 2) rights defense, 3) corruption and
Further, rights defense issues often involve vulnerable persons, homeowners, and forced
relocation. Qiu & Chen (2009), in a similar manner, identified four major types of issues:
nationalism, rights defense, morals and privacy, and abuse of power. A greater deal of
overlapping exists between different types. For instance, rights defense cases are often
Although many Internet events are contentious (Yang 2009), others do not have
any apparent reference to conflict or power struggle. For example, “Jia Junpeng, your
mother wants you to go home to eat” is a post left at Baidu Post Bar in the World of
Warcraft online game section around 11AM on July 16, 2009. It became an instant hit,
attracting almost 400,000 views and 17,000 comments within six hours. Anonymous and
nonsensical, the post channeled gamers’ frustration at web portal Netease’s delay in
resuming its gaming service as well as a sense of belonging and play. Many other Internet
convey netizens’ yearnings for morals and values in a fast changing Chinese society.
defense and power abuse (Wang & Fang 2009). For instance, among the ten most popular
Internet events in 2009 (People’s Daily 2010b), eight directly question authority and
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evoke sympathy for the underprivileged. Rights defense has also moved from a focus on
the individual to the collective. Online public opinion, for example, vehemently defended
Deng Yujiao, a young waitress who stabbed and injured local officials approaching her
for sexual favors. Public pressure not only kept Deng from prison terms, but also helped
diffuse the state’s plan in 2009 to install Green Dam Youth Escort software on all
computers sold in China intended to collect user data and filter content beyond the
Despite the variety of issue types, the causes of Internet events, most believe, can be
located in offline public sentiments, concerns, and demands. As an amplifier, not a mere
reflection, of the hopes and fears in our society, the Internet mediates the real and the
virtual, reinforcing existing relationships and institutions (Agre 2002). If the previous
analysis of issue types such as rights defense and clashing moral values is indicative of
the specific kinds of reasons that trigger various Internet events, one may uncover deeper
Chinese Internet events differ from those in other societies, partially because the
social forces that bring them about are distinctive. Yu (2009) observes that contemporary
Chinese society is characterized by social fracture and a deep resentment of the rich and
(Huang 2008). This social chasm and rancor are intricately related to societal-wide
rampant corruption as well as changing morals, values and ethics. Specific social issues
like land seizure, forced relocation, pollution, legal injustice, and restructuring of state-
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owned enterprises, when handled inappropriately, may trigger social confrontations that
sometimes take more destructive forms like social venting and riots (Yu 2009).
Previously private domains such as family, sexuality, and marriage also start to take on a
halting the construction of a controversial petrochemical project worth $1.6 billion near
Xiamen, Fujian Province in 2007. Informed by both traditional and online media,
particularly SMS, over 10,000 residents marched peacefully through the city, or “took a
stroll” as locals prefer to call it, to protest the project hazardous to public health and
environment. On the other hand, public curiosity and voyeurism made Sexy Photo Gate
Scandal, involving the online leakage and spread of nude photos of HK pop star Edison
Chen and his girlfriends, the biggest Internet specter in 2008 (Song 2008).
Although most agree Internet events are driven by what happens offline, there is little
agreement on how to differentiate the deeply intertwined real and virtual aspects of such
events in order to determine the role played by the Web. Three types of Internet events
can be discerned based on how the real and virtual interact: 1) those events that take place
online only, 2) offline events amplified by the Internet, and 3) a hybrid of the first two.
Some events (e.g. Jia Junpeng case) remain solely in the virtual space. Others are
amplified by the Internet. The sudden collapse of a shoddy condo building in Shanghai in
2009 attracted the public gaze. As dramatic pictures of the debris made rounds on various
sites, netizens rigorously debated hot button issues of housing markets, building quality,
and public safety. The hybrid type, however, may be less common as an incident must be
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instantly amplified through the Internet as it unfolds. But the arrival of mobile blogging
made it more likely. While speaking at a public lecture at Peking University in June 2010,
millions of posts about the Deng Yujiao incident were all deleted” (China Digital Times
2010). The comment, accompanied by live pictures, was quickly circulated via
microblogging before being taken down by commercial portals soon afterward. With
deeper integration of the mobile web into everyday life, Chinese netizens are more likely
to document and magnify anything they find provocative, scandalous, and intriguing.
Regardless of where an event occurs first, online or offline, an Internet event gains
resources utilized in social activism increasingly include cheaper and more ubiquitous
information and communication technologies (ICTs). It is well recognized that ICTs such
as mobile phones and social networks could help lower the barrier to participation,
facilitate group formation, identity construction, and increase the speed of collective
action (Shirky 2008). It is also observed by the less optimistic (e.g. Goldsmith & Wu
2006; Morozov 2009) that the more resourceful government and business institutions,
which have been strengthened by the same technologies, could produce more bane than
boon. Many authoritarian states including China have marshaled technological, legal, and
social resources to control, filter, and suppress, if necessary, Internet events or activities
deemed harmful to their rule (Deibert et al. 2010). The well-known Great Firewall of
will quickly reveal that some events (e.g. Anti-CNN movement in response to Western
media’s biased coverage of Tibet unrest and Beijing Olympics in 2008) support the state
out of popular nationalism. Many others are directed at specific individuals and local
governments instead of the state. Increasingly the government is taking an active role to
guide, shape, and forge online public opinion to increase its legitimacy in a process
dubbed “authoritarian deliberation” (Jiang 2010). Thus frame analysis, the definition and
construction of a public issue or controversy, is key in revealing how the parties involved
in an Internet event mobilize through “contentious conversations” to define and frame the
issues in question. The Deng Yujiao case acutely demonstrates, for instance, how Deng is
viewed by the public, not as a murderer, but rather as a symbol of the powerless before
Such framing, however, would be ineffective if not for the emotional mobilization
of netizens through joy, anger, sadness, sympathy, parody, and humor (Yang 2009). Nor
the ebbs and flows of these emotions. Traditional means of mobilization through rational
discussion and persuasion may sometimes have limited utility in online events whereas
the employment of human emotions can be more engaging and compelling. Moreover,
emotions can be gained and spent monetarily. Emotions matter not only to netizens but
also to commercial websites which profit from online traffic and attention. Emotions, as a
part of fundamental human expressions, thus should not be dismissed as purely irrational,
unprecedented growth of Internet use in China that affords netizens with the tools and
Netizens participate in agenda setting on a wide range of issues to reshape public life via
online and offline channels. The Internet, while amplifying public voices in an age of
however cannot be reduced to a simple zero-sum game between the state and the
individual or between the state and an emergent civil society. The mosaic composition of
sociopolitical future, that the impact of such events on individuals and the Chinese
society at large is far from clear or straightforward. Of the various topics swarming
through Chinese Internet, very few could rise to visibility, create powerful social impact,
let alone instigate institutional change (Wang & Fang 2009). Online discussions on a
given public issue can rarely sustain over time, partially because they hardly produce
to increasingly dramatic Internet events in the public space may even create emotional
incremental yet profound influence on the individual psyche and social mentality over
time. For instance, how do Chinese netizens react to Internet events, particularly the ones
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demanding social and institutional change? How do their attitudes evolve? Do they
choose to participate in public affairs? In what ways? On the other hand, how do Chinese
cyber activists and their communities evolve? How do they mobilize their resources,
sustain their activities, negotiate with government institutions, and engage the average
netizens? The consequences of Internet events and cyber activism in China should be
should command some attention. Viewed by Chinese authorities as something more than
conduits of public sentiments, demands, and opinions, Internet events are increasingly
monitored, contained, and diffused (Zhu 2009). The past few years have witnessed not
only the mobilization of government resources to rein in Internet events, but also a
growing bureaucratic consensus that favors tighter Internet control (SCIO, 2010). It will
be of interest to see if the central government will take the initiative to build more
effective channels for public participation in local and national public affairs and address
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