It’s long been known that the Chinese government hires people to support the government with fabricated posts on social media. In China these people are known as the “50c party”, so called because the posters were rumored to be paid 50 cents (5 jiao or about $.08) to write the posts. The precise nature and extent of the 50c party has heretofore been unknown. But in an amazing new paper, Gary King, Jennifer Pan and Margaret Robert (KPR) uncover a lot of new information using statistical sleuthing and some unusual and controversial real world sleuthing.Lots more info at the link, including how they determined which social media accounts were Wumaodang.
...First, the posters are government workers paid on salary not, as the 50c phrase suggests, piece-rate workers. Second, and more importantly, it has long been assumed that propaganda posts would support the government with praise or criticize critics of the government. Not so. In fact, propaganda posts actively steer away from controversial issues. Instead, the effort appears to be to distract (especially to distract the people from organizing collective action; thus distraction campaigns peak around times and places where collective action like marches and protests might become focal).
全美高校反战浪潮600人被捕 布林肯:不应对哈马斯 “保持沉默”
-
当前多所美国高校出现挺巴勒斯坦反战示威,从常春藤联盟名校到各州立大学,抗议浪潮已延烧到至少50所校园。截至26 […]...
No comments:
Post a Comment