Paul Mozur 孟建國 Profile picture
Jun 23, 2021 15 tweets 7 min read Read on X
How do you deny genocide accusations today? An online influence campaign of course.

Our breakdown of the anatomy Chinese propaganda campaigns, which now flow fast and at large scale from China to the global internet. This is likely just the beginning. nytimes.com/interactive/20…
In recent months thousands of testimonials from inside Xinjiang purporting to show Uyghurs living happily were blasted across the global internet.

The videos look spontaneous. They are anything but. Each step of the way was the hand of China’s government.
Our analysis found major linguistic correlations between the testimonials, suggesting they were half-scripted. At times they are disturbingly like hostage videos. People saying they’re free in the same way over and over obviously points to the opposite likelihood.
In some cases Uyghurs in the videos may have been in camps and talk of their wrong thinking. In other cases there are Chinese Communist Party cadres who are part of the system. Others are more bizarre, like this one of a student stiffly describing how great things are.
As with everything in China, even the darkest top-down orders cut across society. Here we see school kids who tuned the propaganda order into a class project.
So what’s the point of it all? Together the videos may not seem convincing, but out of context floating around the internet they can be. They also represent a new more muscular approach by the CCP to beam domestic propaganda across the global internet.
Please take a few minutes to check out our interactive, which has more videos/analysis. Below I’ll lay out an anatomy of how all this content was created and pumped out to the world. It’s a new disinformation pipeline which China’s government will likely refine in coming years.
In January, days after US Sec of State Pompeo designated the mass internments in Xinjiang a genocide, officials started a new propaganda campaign in Xinjiang. Cadres fanned out to "preach" about Pompeo’s evil and collect denunciations. Here’s a pile from Kashgar telco workers:
Soon after, videos began emerging. They closely resembled the written denunciations, only they were made selfie style for social media. First they appeared on an app called Pomegranate Cloud. It’s owned by the CCP run Xinjiang Daily. They claim rights and list an editor:
Then they spread across China’s media landscape. Other state-run media picked up videos. On social media too, they were spread far and wide. Here they are on the WeChat page of the internet regulator in Xinjiang, again giving credit to CCP run Pomegranate Cloud:
What happened next was surprising and new. Within days, the videos began to appear on YouTube and Twitter. An NYT analysis found close coordination, videos would appear on YouTube, and twenty minutes later go out via a bot network on Twitter. The YouTube accounts are still up.
Before long, the videos were picked up by Chinese officials with huge Twitter followings, like Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokes people Hua Chunying and Zhao Lijian. Their tweets act as if the videos were spontaneous.

Chinese state media echoed their efforts posting videos too.
Other sites that feed the broader China nationalist social media world, like the Qiao Collective, assembled links to the content for influencers and others online to pickup. Some did.
It's one of the first times I can recall a propaganda campaign clearly designed for domestic consumption so quickly and muscularly amplified to the world. A month later, as the Chinese internet took a two-minutes hate on H&M, a new folly of videos followed the same exact path.
The H&M videos were better, but not Grade A viral content. Even so, they are a statement of intent. These are first tentative steps in a global propaganda campaign backed by huge resources. In China such campaigns have succeeded. They will likely work on the global internet too.

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More from @paulmozur

Dec 15, 2022
As Russia's invasion of Ukraine stalled, its television propaganda fired on all cylinders. In recent months we went through 1000s of emails from Russia's biggest state broadcaster to learn how. It was a master class in constructing an alternative reality. nytimes.com/2022/12/15/tec…
Each day Russian producers sent incredibly detailed lists of memes and media that could be used to undercut the West. Often that included right-wing cable TV and misleading memes, like this one, showing empty grocery shelves in the US:
Tucker Carlson was a favorite. “Don’t forget to take Tucker” producers wrote to a state-media journalist in the US, pointing to a clip where Tucker warned how opposing Russia and China could end the dollar’s status as a world reserve currency. They often used other clips too:
Read 9 tweets
Nov 28, 2022
It’s day 3 and still videos of protests spread on Chinese social media. We see some familiar tricks, people use filters and take videos of videos to bypass AI models designed to identify sensitive videos. Still, the scale of sharing is likely overwhelming censorship manpower.
It’s difficult to censor video. AI trained software can find specific videos, or things in videos (like candles and tanks). But it’s costly to train new algos and the diversity of protest videos makes it very tough. Thus you need people to check, that takes time.
Tactics like the above, video of a video, trip up the algos too. Ultimately, it’s not that the censorship apparatus is failing, it’s just hit it’s natural limit. When you have this many people posting this much and being creative, the world’s best internet control regime loses.
Read 6 tweets
Nov 27, 2022
Videos of protests across China are still visible on WeChat, even as they quickly become unplayable. This is definitely another Li Wenliang moment, when the full power of the world’s best censorship system battles the full fury of many Chinese. For now, the censors are struggling
It’s worth recalling since Li’s death, we’ve seen with increasing frequency online outrage that even China’s internet controls have struggled to contain. Shanghai lockdowns, Guizhou bus crash, now the Xinjiang fire. Each was a massive censorship event all its own.
It’s hard to know how large each given outpouring was. But the increasing frequency with which you see these mega censorship events is certainly a trend line that gets us to where we are now.
Read 4 tweets
Oct 28, 2022
Get ready for China state-affiliated commentators to raise objections/kiss up to Elon. It would be surprising if Musk doesn’t get lobbied by Beijing to cut Twitter’s labeling of China media/officials. We’ll see how he responds. Obvi big q is also how he handles China disinfo.
Exhibit two in the trend. Again China has been massively active on Twitter with bot nets boosting state media/diplomat disinfo efforts on Covid origins, mass internments in Xinjiang and Russian propaganda like Ukraine bio labs. Musk will have a test in how to deal with it.
For examples about how this works, last year we showed how Chinese state media and embassy accounts on twitter spread YouTube videos in which minority Uyghurs read rote scripts attesting to how free they were and how great their life was: nytimes.com/interactive/20…
Read 9 tweets
Sep 22, 2022
We spent months digging through a 700 gigabyte cache from within Russia's de facto internet intel agency Roskomnadzor.

It gave us one of the most complete pictures yet of Putin's efforts to control the internet. It is at turns farcical and terrifying.
nytimes.com/interactive/20…
As Russia's invasion of Ukraine proceeded, local officials in Bashkortostan, a republic east of Moscow where the files are from, noted down in detail online discontent and protests. They tallied views, likes, specific criticism of Putin, and updated dossiers of worst offenders.
The attention to detail from one small team in one tiny part of Russia is startling. They chronicle anti-war walks and complaints about inflation. At times the reports sound like weather forecasts. “Calm with separate minor pockets of tension,” one said after a dissident arrest.
Read 11 tweets
Jun 26, 2022
Awash in a sea of data, China authorities are trying to police the future.

It's not sci fi. Using vast data records on citizens, new software uses scoring and AI to predict crime and protest before they happen. Often the result is automated prejudice. nytimes.com/2022/06/25/tec…
It works like this: Police make blacklists of people they believe are suspicious: drug users, protesters, the mentally ill. Then they aim the surveillance system at those groups, collecting huge amounts of data on activity, location, relationships: nytimes.com/video/world/as…
Specialized software helps them program digital tripwires on predetermined behaviors they believe could signal a crime. If someone goes to a train station daily, but doesn't ride, they might be a pickpocket. An alarm instructs police to check on them. No warrant necessary.
Read 14 tweets

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