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China Hires As Many As 300,000 Internet Trolls To Make The Communist Party Look Good - Business Insi

So this is the work from home and make $ schemes you keep hearing about :D

I have a pay pal account and I am willing to work for Chinese govt. Maybe one of the chinese posters can guide me to their boss :P

They need intelligent ones.
 
The Chinese government doesn't just censor its internet. It actually pays people to leave fake comments that make the country - and its communist regime - look good.

After reading "Blocked on Weibo" by Chinese researcher Jason Q. Ng, we recently learned China's version of Twitter, Sina Weibo, banned the phrase "50 cents." It references China's "50 Cent Party," a group of ordinary citizens hired by the government to post internet comments spinning that day's news in China's favor.

These hired guns supposedly earn 50 cents (or .5 Yuan) for every post. While the Chinese government has only implicitly acknowledged their existence, the brigade likely functions at various levels, with some commenters even employed by websites or internet providers themselves.

An estimated 250,000 to 300,000 belong to the "party," researchers from Harvard University wrote in the American Political Science Review in May 2013. "The size and sophistication of the Chinese government's program to selectively censor the expressed views of the Chinese people is unprecedented in recorded world history," the authors wrote.

In 2011 an internal directive for 50 Cent members leaked, China Digital Times reported. The assigned tasks for 50 Cent members include making America the "target of criticism" as well as using "the bloody and tear-stained history" of China to create pro-Party sentiments. The goal is to prevent democratic encroachment from its sovereign island neighbor, Taiwan.

British magazine the New Statesman actually tracked down one of these hired propagandists in 2012. The anonymous 26-year-old said he had "too many usernames" to count and that he recieved an email from the local internet publicity office every morning explaining what news he should focus on that day.

"It's kind of psychological ... You can make a bad thing sound even worse, make an elaborate account, and make people think it's nonsense when they see it," he told the Statesman's Ai Weiwei.

China's censorship program, the Golden Shield Project, known to the West as the "Great Firewall," has existed for nearly a decade. It blocks foreign websites that threaten the Communist message, as well as surveils and filters content on home soil. Journalists and netizens alike who don't abide by the rules face prison - or worse.

Aside from that, however, the government started to add its own comments to the mix in 2005, when anti-Japanese protests erupted across China, The Economist reports. Controlling the internet wasn't enough. The party needed to "use" the internet, as then-president Hu Jintao said in 2007. And Sina Weibo's birth in 2009 forced the 50-Centers to become even more active.

China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology took the party's abilities a step further in 2014, setting up a training center, according toRadio Free Asia. The program intends to teach aspiring members how to direct and control online discussions.

"There was never this sort of system or professionalization in the past," independent website publisher Wang Jinxiang told RFA. "It seems that this is a new set of qualifications."

And the new initiatives appear to have worked. China's censorship was alive and well during recent protests in Hong Kong.

China Hires As Many As 300,000 Internet Trolls To Make The Communist Party Look Good | Business Insider India

Are they also getting free internet to do it. :rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl:
 
i maybe indian, but i am willing to work for the 50 cent army. how do i sign up? :tup:
 

I like my exchanges with you, so it doesn't matter. Sometimes your use of colloquial diction makes me smile, giggle and laugh,...lol

i maybe indian, but i am willing to work for the 50 cent army. how do i sign up? :tup:

But, friend, 50 cents is so little. You'd have to post 40 substantiative posts per day just to make 20 bucks.
 
:lol: There are some chinese members who have accused you as a "spy" LOL

LOOL yes my friend Nihonji, they even said i was a spy.:rofl:
They can't seem to accept criticism on here, it applies not only to Chinese, but also Indians, Turkish,Pakistanis, other muslim members on here etc:disagree:
 
If it is true, then those government officials are still peasants with peasant mentality.

Sigh, if they want to launch propaganda, they surely do a very poor job. First they need send those people to study human psychology, sociology, etc to learn how humans think, how public opinions form. What they are doing now is just disservice to the CCP's image.

Also, I do think some of the Chinese members I ignored are some paid employees. I have never seen in real life people that are such royalists to the CCP. Most Chinese people in real life are neutral towards politics. They just live their life like normal people and tacitly accept the CCP's government.

However, I also think the article exaggerated this issue. I frequently visit Chinese forums and don't think those people have any impact on how Chinese internet users think. Those people are just one group of internet users, just like various groups with different opinions, so who cares. I just put them on ignore. simple.
 
Makes you wonder how many Chinitowns are getting paid to troll on this forum.
 
But, friend, 50 cents is so little. You'd have to post 40 substantiative posts per day just to make 20 bucks.

That is enough for a decent pocket money when parents usually give long lecture how to save money and wasting time on the internet. :rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl:
 
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