In its attempts to restrict the free flow of info about Putin's invasion of Ukraine, TikTok has—unannounced—blocked an estimated 95% of content previously available to Russians, @trackingexposed found.
If you read our 2020 @ASPI_ICPC paper on TikTok you won't be surprised. 🧵
ByteDance, the Chinese company that owns & operates TikTok is rivalled only by Tencent as the most censorship-ready tech company on the planet.
On March 8th, with the flick of a switch, all non-Russian content was blocked on Russian TikTok.
TikTok's ability to restrict access to content at this scale was evident in 2020.
As we discovered, the use of #путинвор (‘Putin Is A Thief’)—a catchcry of the political opposition—was blocked on the platform.
When we looked under the hood we found that the self-described “progressive and forward-looking company” was categorising LGBTQ+ content on their platform in the same way that #Nazi, #ISIS, #KKK & #cocaine are.
In addition to this mass restriction of content, @trackingexposed also found that a network of coordinated accounts is using a loophole to post pro-war propaganda in Russia.
Overnight, TikTok has turned into a 24/7 propaganda channel for the Kremlin.
Chinese influencer Li Ziqi has 17.2 million followers on YouTube.
She's the biggest by far, but there are thousands of other China-based accounts on the platform.
But wait. Isn't YouTube blocked in China? What gives?
Here's how it all works. 🧵
The short answer is that influencers from Li Ziqi down go through special agencies that are trusted by the party-state.
When she was still posting videos, Li did it through WebTVAsia, a Beijing-based YouTube-certified MCN* owned by Malaysian entertainment company Prodigee Media.
WebTVAsia operates more than 600 YouTube channels for PRC-based talent, including the People’s Daily, the official newspaper of the Central Committee of the CCP.
If you spent any time on China-watching Twitter in 2021, you probably came across these two women.
Party-state media, Chinese diplomats & foreign vloggers tried to make out they were just an ordinary account.
We took a closer look & found out that wasn't quite right. 🧵
The women, who introduce themselves in the above video as 'Elder Guli' & 'Younger Guli', two 'Uyghur sisters from Xinjiang', featured in the ‘Story of Xinjiang by Guli’ (SOXBG) set of accounts on YouTube, Twitter, Instagram & TikTok.
All of those platforms are blocked in China.
Actually, both women worked for a Chengdu-based agency, the name of which translates to ‘Chengdu Grey Man Culture Communications’ (成都灰灰侠文化传播有限公司)—a company heavily involved in Xinjiang-related propaganda work.
Here they are in a 'Chengdu Grey Man' recruitment ad:
I genuinely understand the urge to write about how WeChat, despite all its problems, is still a good app in some ways.
When I was in China, I loved using it.
But despite all the important activity & civic engagement that ~can~ take place on it, that doesn't change the fact that it is a highly censored & surveilled space.
WeChat censored our former Prime Minister & then completely de-platformed him. (If you believe any of the other explanations, I have a bridge to sell you)
I honestly do not see how that is not the end of the discussion. It was unacceptable & we shouldn't stand for it.