
I briefly visited Hong Kong in January, and a friend recommended I read James Griffithsβ The Great Firewall of China: How to Build and Control an Alternative Version of the Internet before I go. Iβd wanted to learn about technologyβs role in the 2019-2020 protests there against the newly-introduced extradition bill, widely seen as enabling the Chinese government to pursue political dissidents. Iβd hoped to learn about the use of technology by both activists, who used secure messaging apps to build and sustain a βleaderlessβ movement, and by the government to surveil them.
I soon realized the naivete of even trying to speak with activists in Hong Kong, however. Several friends whoβve lived there warned against asking about the protests at all, describing how all their politically-engaged friends had recently left, some fearing political persecution.
And I spoke with the father of a good friend over video call who described how he and his wife had recently move away themselves. They both grew up in Hong Kong, and then left to pursue academic careers. But they returned in 1996, as Hong Kongβs political and economic climate bloomed in a more democratic, open direction. He told me how theyβd intended to retire there, in the place theyβd grown up, to live out the rest of their lives.
But then things changed, rapidly, beginning with the 2019 protests and then the passing of the National Security Law in 2020. My friendβs father, a professor, joined the protests early on β but as the political situation worsened, he and his wife again decided to leave the country. And this time, they donβt know if theyβll ever return.
Last week we discussed the TikTok bill proposed by the US Congress, so letβs turn our attention to learn how the Chinese government works to control the countryβs internet β and by extension, its people.
I want to make clear before we begin, when I talk about βChinaβ in these posts, Iβm referring to the Chinese government β the CCP, led by Xi Jinping, the re-election of whom Amnesty International declared a βdisaster for human rights.β I have many Chinese and Chinese-American friends, and Iβve spent several weeks in the country myself. Far too often a countryβs darkest shadows are extended by media and politicians onto its citizens, a conflation that has time and again led to violence and discrimination against ordinary people who, through no fault of their own, come from a place with unsavory leaders. We Americans, of course, would be quite unwelcome in much of the world if all the terrible things our leaders did were projected onto us.
One day soon Iβd like to write a whole post about this. Last fall, I met a Russian tech worker living in Phnom Penh, Laos, who told me sheβs been a digital nomad since the start of Russiaβs invasion into Ukraine. She spoke about her frustrations explaining to nearly everyone she meets that even though sheβs Russian, she doesnβt support Putin. And I met others like her scattered around southeast Asia, often shy to even identify their Russian heritage.
But for now, letβs talk about China. And specifically, the Chinese governmentβs antagonistic relationship with the internet.

Covering the many ways in which China censors and surveils the internet is an undertaking far too big for this newsletter. Iβll be pulling from Griffithsβ book on Chinaβs βGreat Firewallβ extensively, and thatβs the point βΒ he wrote a whole book on the subject! Itβs highly readable though, and I recommend it to anyone wanting to dig deeper on internet censorship and surveillance in China and beyond.
But given the recent US news around TikTok, letβs try to better understand why some congresspeople came away from national security briefings βdeeply troubledβ about the app.
Interestingly in light of recent US news, even TikTok is banned in China. Chinaβs citizens can use a similar app called Douyin, but canβt see whatever dance videos are going viral in the rest of the world there. And we canβt see whatβs gaining ground among the youths of China, either.
Iβve seen criticism of this legislation take on at least three forms:
The TikTok bill should go further, limiting data collection by US companies, too
Congress didnβt do a good job explaining why the TikTok bill is worth passing
Fears of Chinese control donβt merit limiting the ownership of the tech we use
I largely agree with the first two points, as Senator Katie Porter discussed in a recent interview explaining why she didnβt vote for the bill. But I think (1) is infeasible anytime soon β people in the US have clamored for social media regulation for years, and we shouldnβt expect that to change until after the November election. One might question the urgency of doing this in an election year, but as weβve seen, certain foreign governments β including Russia, China, and Iran β have repeatedly weaponized social media to interfere with US elections.
And I agree with (2), that Congress hasnβt done a good job explaining why the Chinese tech companiesβ ties with the CCP are worthy of concern βΒ which is part of why Iβm writing these posts! Some in Congress agree, and are pushing to de-classify some of the national security information that βdeeply troubledβ them into forcing the TikTok sale in the first place.
But I disagree strongly with (3), an argument that seems something along the lines of, βJust because China, a ruthless authoritarian regime, exerts tremendous control over the internet, doesnβt mean we should do anything to stave it off β because weβre America, dammit, and weβre better than that!β Iβm reminded of Michelle Obama saying βWhen they go low, we go highβ in a speech in 2016. That was eight years ago, and said in specific regard to demeaning language β but taken in the context of todayβs politics it sounds a little, well, naive.Β
For decades, internet fans β including myself β have viewed the internet as a force that will ultimately prevail in expanding the possibilities of human capability and flourishing, empowering the little guy to stand up to The Man. The internet has always been a place for utopian visions.Β
But those utopias havenβt always borne fruit. As we saw in my posts on the internet in Cuba last fall, sometimes The Man wins.Β
And in China, this really is the case. When it comes to internet control and censorship, in fact, Chinaβs writing a lot of the rules β and showing others how to follow them. As a friend said recently, China doesnβt fuck around.
Today, weβll see the many ways in which the Chinese government has built a vast web of surveillance and control over its internet. And next week, weβll learn how the same government isnβt afraid to export those hardball capabilities to the rest of the world.
βIn the new century, liberty will spread by cell phone and cable modemβ¦. Now there's no question China has been trying to crack down on the Internet. (Chuckles.) Good luck! That's sort of like trying to nail jello to the wall.β βΒ President Bill Clinton, March 2000
Confident as President Clinton was that it could not be done, China seemingly has learned how to βnail jello to the wall.β
Chinaβs βGreat Firewallβ today consists of a vast network of technology and human censors working to ensure the internet within China βΒ the history, news, information and communication coursing through its cables βΒ is far more manicured and CCP-friendly than the βWorld Wide Webβ beyond its borders. And itβs manicured in large part to ensure the ruling party stays in power, quashing any hints of dissent.Β
In 2008, the country employed between 30,000 and 50,000 βspecial internet policeβ β and probably many more today β βwho with the aid of Western-provided technology, read private emails, conduct surveillance, remove blogs and block banned websites.βΒ
One report even estimates the government employs over two million people (!) as βpublic opinion analysts,β delivering reports to government decision makers about whatβs being said, where, and by whom. Topics regularly censored include a multitude of political references such as Tiananmen Square, Taiwan, Tibet, the minority Uyghur population, criticism of government leadership, and more.Β
And the list of blocked websites β at least occasionally, especially in times of heightened political skittishness βΒ is long, and features many popular destinations and news sources. Among many others, Wikipedia, Google, YouTube, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Netflix, Spotify, LinkedIn, BBC, New York Times, Washington Post, NBC, are always or occasionally blocked. (And to the sure upset of many, so are Pornhub and OnlyFans.)
Interestingly in light of recent US news, even TikTok is banned in China. Chinaβs citizens can use a similar app called Douyin, but canβt see whatever dance videos are going viral in the rest of the world there. And we canβt see whatβs gaining ground among the youths of China, either.

Despite these specific bans and blocks, itβs worth noting the words of James Griffiths:
βChinaβs censors do not care about blocking content; they care about blocking solidarity. The number one target of censorship is not the Tiananmen Square massacre, or the banned religious movement Falun Gong, or news about official corruption, it is organisation outside the Party structure. Solidarity β such as that expressed by the hundreds of thousands of protesters in Beijing and other Chinese cities in 1989, or by the millions who took part in the Arab Spring β is the biggest threat to an authoritarian regime.β
βFlood the Zone with Shitβ
Steve Bannon famously uttered those words to explain his strategy for overpowering truth and β in his view β liberal bias in American media. There is only a finite amount of time in which to consume media, and the internet provides infinite avenues for consuming it. Rather than change the narrative and tone of existing popular channels to convince people to join your side, the idea goes, itβs better to simply flood the internet βwith shit.β That is, to fill the information universe with as much of your ideas as possible, whether itβs truthful or not.
And indeed, Bannon pursues this strategy with vigor, releasing at least two podcast episodes daily. We discussed this idea at length with the brilliant media scholar AJ Bauer on our podcast last year too, if youβre curious to hear more.
I usually try to avoid too much discussion of US politics in this newsletter, but I explain Bannonβs approach because of its similarity to that taken by pro-CCP forces online. As Griffiths explains:
βChinaβs online influence effort is sprawling, dwarfing even those of Russia and the US. This is achieved both through paid commentators, known as βwumaoβ for the fifty cents they were reportedly paid per post in the early days, and by volunteer trolls, who are encouraged and led by state media, and usually go after overseas targetsβ¦.. they generally focus on positive news, drowning out controversial topics with government-approved posts. After all, attacks on a baizuo, or βwhite leftistβ, as some liberals and progressives are called on the Chinese web, can give them oxygen and attention the censors would rather they not enjoy. A 2016 study estimated that internet commenters employed by the government created around 448 million fake social media posts every year, focusing on βcheerleadingβ for the government rather than tussling with its critics.β
Whether in China, the US, or elsewhere, pumping out massive quantities of disinformation can be an incredibly effective strategy for spreading propaganda. Itβs less important to directly combat information you dislike, in other words, than to simply drown it out.

Unfreedom of the Press
Chinaβs government not only works to block and βflood outβ information it dislikes, but also prosecutes and imprisons those spreading it. The ways in which the CCP has suppressed journalists, activists, and other critics β both within and beyond its borders β is incredibly long, but letβs explore a few prominent cases.
Reporters Without Borders ranks China 179th out of 180 β barely ahead of North Korea β in its 2023 RSF World Press Freedom Index. It also states the country is βthe world's largest captor of journalists and press freedom defenders with at least 112 detained.β
Chinaβs efforts at stamping out political dissent have especially focused on the countryβs Uyghur population,Β a minority, largely Muslim ethnic group heavily concentrated in the western province of Xinjiang. The ways in which China has sought to control and persecute this group have been thoroughly documented, and that control has extended deep into Chinaβs internet as well.
Griffiths discusses the case of Huang Shike, who was βarrested after forming a group on [WeChat] to discuss the Qurβan,β and βlater jailed for two years for having violated laws about using the internet to discuss religion.β And he writes at length about the tragic case of Ilham Tohti, who co-founded the website Uyghur Online to bring attention to issues affecting the Uyghur population. Tohti was persistently harassed by the government since creating the site, and βΒ in a move widely decried by internet and press freedom advocates βΒ finally sentenced to a life in prison in 2014 under charges of βseparatism.β
Individuals have even been jailed for making jokes about Xi Jinping and other top officials in private texts. And the Wall Street Journal reports at least fifty people have been sent to prison for publishing government criticism on Twitter and other social media platforms, even though most Chinese internet users canβt even view them.

A great deal of media coverage the past several years has focused on Chinaβs Black Mirror-esque βsocial credit system,β feared as a panopticon of ever-present surveillance β especially of the Uyghur population β tracking nearly every action in citizensβ lives, both on- and offline. And though some point out that the social credit system may not be as comprehensive and dystopic as originally feared, the small city of Rongcheng provides a vivid illustration of how such a system can look.Β
As reported in MIT Technology Review:
βIn 2013, the city started giving every resident a base personal credit score of 1,000 that can be influenced by their good and bad deeds. For example, in a 2016 rule that has since been overhauled, the city decided that βspreading harmful information on WeChat, forums, and blogsβ meant subtracting 50 points, while βwinning a national-level sports or cultural competitionβ meant adding 40 points. In one extreme case, one resident lost 950 points in the span of three weeks for repeatedly distributing letters online about a medical dispute.
βSuch scoring systems,β the author argues, βhave had very limited impact in China, since they have never been elevated to provincial or national levels.β But even if so, βNo one can be 100% sureβ that the national government wonβt see the pilot programs of cities like Rongcheng and choose to expand them.
The author notes, hopefully, that the national government recently pushed back on local social credit policies in places like Rongcheng. But time will tell which direction this trend moves.
Circumventing the Censors
Even if all this provides overwhelming evidence of the internet being used by βThe Manβ to control βthe little guy,β there are some glimmers of hope. The human desire to find creative ways to circumvent control can be seen throughout history, and this is so in China today, too.
Many β including John Oliver β have documented the way in which many Chinese citizens utilize a kind of wordplay to circumvent censors online. The Chinese language lends itself well to this, and internet writers can take advantage of the written script β which employs very different characters to convey similar sounds, called homonyms β to help hide meaning in seemingly disparate written words.
For instance, the word βHΓ©xiΓ©β means βHarmony,β and is itself a euphemism for censorship β a politically-sensitive topic for online discussion . But βHΓ©xiΓ©β in Chinese sounds an awful lot like a different word, βHΓ©xiΓ¨,β which means something completely different: βriver crab.β

The terms look different, but sound similar β and any savvy Chinese internet user can easily determine what βMy blog post was attacked by a river crab last nightβ really means. But the term can crawl, perhaps not unlike a river crab, past the internet censorsβ keyword filters and searches.
At least, it can for a while. Government censors eventually learn these workaround words, and new ones must be found. There are now hundreds of terms that have been used, and occasionally blocked, to refer to the Tiananmen Square protests and massacre online, for instance. But the workarounds work for a time.
I could write about this much, much more, but I wonβt. If youβd like to read more, Rest of World cleverly illustrated examples of this, and John Oliverβs Last Week Tonight discussing Chinese censorship and Xi Jinping is worth revisiting.
And unsurprisingly given everything weβve discussed here, his show was banned in China after the episode aired.
Thatβs it for now. Come back next week, when weβll look at the many ways the Chinese government has expanded this internet control to stifle dissent and influence public opinion beyond the nationβs borders.
Song of the Week: Matt Force β Sofar Sounds Hong KongΒ Β