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I heard they also set up the "50 Cent Party" in the Internet (!?)


50 Cent Party Crashers
I spend a lot of time reading about China on the Internet. It's my job, but even before it was my job it was a very serious hobby. I also like to look through readers' comments. Articles on China often hit a nerve with readers, Chinese and American (or otherwise) alike, and generate fierce debates, sometimes hundreds of comments even on a relatively brief article. But in the past few years these debates have been hijacked by the 五毛党(wu mao dang), or 50 Cent Party. They are the legion of young Chinese Internet users (some estimate there are 280,000 of them) who are paid 50 mao (roughly 7 cents) to post comments on blogs, news articles, bulletin boards, etc. that are pro-Communist Party, essentially to drown out critical voices. While they are most active on Chinese-language sites, the 50 Cent Party has found its way onto message boards, blogs and other forums in Western media, too, even spearheading the campaign against CNN's Jack Cafferty for calling the leadership in Beijing a bunch of "goons and thugs." David Bandurski wrote a great article in the Far Eastern Economic Review last year about this phenomenon.
http://www.laogai.org/blog/50-cent-party-crashers


50 Cent Party
The 50 Cent Party are Internet commentators (网络评论员, 網絡評論員, wǎnglù pínglùn yuán) hired by the government of the People's Republic of China (both local and central) or the Communist Party to post comments favorable towards party policies in an attempt to shape and sway public opinion on various Internet message boards.[1][2] The commentators are said to be paid for every post that either steers a discussion away from anti-party or sensitive content on domestic websites, bulletin board systems, and chatrooms,[3] or that advances the Communist party line.[4][5]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/50_Cent_Party

China’s 50-Cent Feud Leads to a Rumble
By Adam Minter Jul 13, 2012 12:28 AM GMT+0700
At 1 p.m. on July 6, two well-known Chinese microbloggers arrived at the south gate of Beijing’s Chaoyang Park to settle their differences. The encounter was publicly pre-arranged on Sina Weibo, China’s most popular microblog.
No (uniformed) police arrived, despite the fact that in the 48 hours after the challenge was issued and accepted, the event's details were re-tweeted thousands of times on Chinese microblogs.
It was an inevitable clash, with the parties representing either side of China’s deepest online partisan divide: those who allegedly blog on behalf of the government and those who allegedly debate free of any taint. The former group is known pejoratively as “the 50-Cent Party,” or 50-Centers, an Anglicization of the .5 yuan ($0.08) fee they are rumored to receive for each pro-government post or tweet. (Though the name has stuck, several government agencies have denied that this is their actual salary.) One doesn’t need to be in the employ of the government to be a 50-Center -- it’s enough to simply act like it. Of those who act like it, few are more reviled than Wu Danhong, a 33-year-old professor at Beijing University of Political Science and Law, who blogs under the handle Wu Fa Tian and denies he's paid by the government. Even the pro-government Global Times newspaper publishes the sneering occasional nickname China’s microbloggers have given Wu: “chief representative" of the 50-Cent Party.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-07-12/china-s-50-cent-feud-leads-to-a-rumble.html
 
I heard they also set up the "50 Cent Party" in the Internet (!?)


50 Cent Party Crashers | Laogai Research Foundation


Haha,are you kidding,just 50 cents? there are many websites award 2 kuai per post for posting stuff promoting their products,the most famous is this one,if you want to make some small money,go to this site(威客-猪八戒网,中国最大的威客网站 2 kuai per post,50 cents basically means working for free.
 
No one can overtake the Chinese now. They dominate the online forum trolling scene--online game account theft scene--online game resource grinding scene--fake online 'European-"no knowing English"-girlfriend' scene.

To top it all off, they even have a CPC sponsored 50cent trolling brigade roaming the cyberspace.
 
Dude they avoid it because you folks dont even spare small time gaming firms from Chinese trolls/fakers and account thieves.

As for other online firms, every form of international online company has their own Chinese horror story to tell.
sure
that is why an advance investigation for target market is very important
do the homeworks before you start your plan
 
They may have very limited options to surf considering the censorship by CCP.:lol:
 
Yet the rest of the world can't feel Chinese presence thanks to the Great Firewall.

except you, there no any other Korean here, why the world can't feel Korea presence??? , you live in US, can talk in English quickly, but other Korean only speak in Korean, no others of the world can understand
Chinese post in Chinese at Chinese sites, if any one can speak in Chinese can find them
 
Google Trends: ****

Apparently Fox news forgot to report this
 
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