Wechatscope is a research project from the University of Hong Kong; they ingest every public status update on Wechat, the Chinese social network used by more than a billion people, then record which messages are later made unavailable, and infer from that the most censored topics on the network.
International scandals top the list — the US-Chinese trade war; the arrest of Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou by Canadian authorities; US sanctions against ZTE — but the list is dominated by domestic scandals: #MeToo at Peking University, a string of corruption cases, business frauds, and the CRISPR twins.
It’s a good reminder that Chinese internet censorship is a nuanced phenomenon, where certain kinds of unrest and scandal are tolerated (especially if they help root out corruption that does not implicate favored high-level officials), but anything that spills over into real-world demonstrations is stopped before it can get started.
Upon examining our full 2018 data set, the research team found that the scope of topics censored on WeChat has expanded from domestic policies and social unrest to less politically sensitive topics, in what seems to be an effort to support China’s international political image as a “great power”. The most sensitive topics of 2018 included:
1.
China-US trade war2.
US sanctions against ZTE3.
The arrest of Meng Wanzhou, CFO of Huawei in Canada4.
The investigation of businessman Ye Jianming for economic crimes5.
Hongmao medicinal liquor scandal6.
#Metoo and sexual harassment allegations against a Peking University professor7.
Passenger-driver conflict in Chongqing8.
World’s first genetically-edited baby9.
Changsheng vaccine scandal10.
Fan Bingbing tax fraud scandal
Censored on WeChat: A year of content removals on China’s most powerful social media platform · Global Voices [Marcus Wang and Stella Fan/Global Voices]