10 Insane Cases of Censorship on Sina Weibo in 2012

Posted: December 25, 2012 at 11:41 am

It has been a doubleplusgood year for Sina Weibo in terms of doubling its registered user count to 400 million. But, as Chinas hottest Twiitery, real-time social medium, Weibo has once again been a political hot potato for Sina (NASDAQ:SINA - News) - and its still not turning a profit.

Just as with all media in China, Sina Weibo is heavily censored; but doing this in real-time, under the weight of hundreds of millions of users, and in a year of tumult, corruption and a leadership changeover, looked to be a huge challenge for the web portal company. In 2012, Weibo has seen some astonishing new censorship ploys, and, at one point of the year, every single Weibo user was very publicly punished by authorities. Looking back on it, it was all pretty insane.

Here are 10 stand-out cases, in chronological order, of Weibo - at the behest of authorities - gagging its users:

Sometimes, the seriousness of a news story is unintentionally revealed by the severity of the Weibo cover-up that it merits. In February of this year, thats exactly what happened as the biggest scandal of the year - perhaps the biggest political scandal in China for decades - began to unfold with the defection of a top police chief to the US embassy in Chengdu. Eventually this story was made known to the Chinese public via state TV (and it led to the downfall of top politician Bo Xialai), but for a while it was only via Sina Weibo and some other social media that the news was flowing.

And its precisely because state TV is so economical - and/or slow - with the truth that Sina Weibo is often full of rumors. That went to an extreme in March when Chinese web users got themselves into a frenzy over some photos of several military vehicles on the streets of Beijing. Those images somehow frothed up into coup rumors. That prompted an amazing and massive slam-down by authorities, who ordered Sina to ban all comments for four days while those rumors were cleaned up.

Those who spread rumors were called lawbreakers by Xinhua, the official state wire service. It was interesting that this happened despite recently implemented real-name registration requirements for users on Sina Weibo and all other Twitter-like social media - a move that was designed to clamp down on rumors and other online behavior that authorities deem to be unhealthy.

After all that excitement, we had only to wait a few weeks before another astonishing story emerged that really put Sinas censors on red alert. In this case, we observed that Weibo was not blocking posts being created that contained the newest-of-very-many sensitive terms, but was instead not indexing them in Weibos own search engine (at s.weibo.com) so as to make it seem like less of a popular topic.

By the time we reached May, Sina Weibo was so over-sensitive that it just seemed to have folded in on itself and then got sucked up its own ass.

Soon, Sina had drawn up a user contract that outlined what users could discuss on the social platform. It included points such as a ban on calls for disruption of social order through illegal gatherings, formation of organizations, protests, demonstrations, mass gatherings, and assemblies.

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10 Insane Cases of Censorship on Sina Weibo in 2012

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