西方学者掀起恶意攻击,反证明我党治国有方

入得谷来,祸福自求。
Post Reply
simonsun
Posts: 2663
Joined: 2006-12-24 4:41

西方学者掀起恶意攻击,反证明我党治国有方

Post by simonsun » 2014-08-23 12:51

还是高端的《科学》杂志,作者潜入天朝内网装成反动小混混!

结论证明了我党治国有方!支持口头批评,体察民情;反对集众示威,有效维稳。 :worthy:

http://www.sciencemag.org/content/345/6199/1251722.html
Reverse-engineering censorship in China: Randomized experimentation and participant observation

INTRODUCTION
Censorship has a long history in China, extending from the efforts of Emperor Qin to burn Confucian texts in the third century B.C.E. to the control of traditional broadcast media under Communist Party rule. However, with the rise of the Internet and new media platforms, more than 1.3 billion people can now broadcast their individual views, making information far more diffuse and considerably harder to control. In response, the government has built a massive social media censorship organization, the result of which constitutes the largest selective suppression of human communication in the recorded history of any country. :shock: We show that this large system,designed to suppress information, paradoxically leaves large footprints and so reveals a great deal about itself and the intentions of the government.

RATIONALE
Chinese censorship of individual social media posts occurs at two levels: (i) Many tens of thousands of censors, working inside Chinese social media firms and government at several levels, read individual social media posts, and decide which ones to take down. (ii) They also read social media submissions that are prevented from being posted by automated keyword filters, and decide which ones to publish.

To study the first level, we devised an observational study to download published Chinese social media posts before the government could censor them, and to revisit each from a worldwide network of computers to see which was censored. To study the second level, we conducted the first large-scale experimental study of censorship by creating accounts on numerous social media sites throughout China, submitting texts with different randomly assigned content to each, and detecting from a worldwide network of computers which ones were censored. :-o

To find out the details of how the system works, we supplemented the typical current approach (conducting uncertain and potentially unsafe confidential interviews with insiders) with a participant observation study, in which we set up our own social media site in China. While also attempting not to alter the system we were studying, we purchased a URL, rented server space, contracted with Chinese firms to acquire the same software as used by existing social media sites, and—with direct access to their software, documentation, and even customer service help desk support—reverse engineered how it all works.

RESULTS
Criticisms of the state, its leaders, and their policies are routinely published, whereas posts with collective action potential are much more likely to be censored—regardless of whether they are for or against the state (two concepts not previously distinguished in the literature). Chinese people can write the most vitriolic blog posts about even the top Chinese leaders without fear of censorship, but if they write in support of or opposition to an ongoing protest—or even about a rally in favor of a popular policy or leader—they will be censored.

We clarify the internal mechanisms of the Chinese censorship apparatus and show how changes in censorship behavior reveal government intent by presaging their action on the ground. That is, it appears that criticism on the web, which was thought to be censored, is used by Chinese leaders to determine which officials are not doing their job of mollifying the people and need to be replaced.

CONCLUSION
Censorship in China is used to muzzle those outside government who attempt to spur the creation of crowds for any reason—in opposition to, in support of, or unrelated to the government. The government allows the Chinese people to say whatever they like about the state, its leaders, or their policies, because talk about any subject unconnected to collective action is not censored. :roll: The value that Chinese leaders find in allowing and then measuring criticism by hundreds of millions of Chinese people creates actionable information for them and, as a result, also for academic scholars and public policy analysts.
Violent delights.

Jun
Posts: 27816
Joined: 2003-12-15 11:43

Re: 西方学者掀起恶意攻击,反证明我党治国有方

Post by Jun » 2014-08-23 19:22

很精致的治国驯民法。大家有地方 blow off steam,但又不会对政权造成威胁。
此喵已死,有事烧纸

Knowing
Posts: 34487
Joined: 2003-11-22 20:37

Re: 西方学者掀起恶意攻击,反证明我党治国有方

Post by Knowing » 2014-08-24 5:22

赞我党驯术高明!
有事找我请发站内消息

tiffany
Posts: 24866
Joined: 2003-11-22 20:59

Re: 西方学者掀起恶意攻击,反证明我党治国有方

Post by tiffany » 2014-08-24 5:26

居然是哈佛出来的。
乡音无改鬓毛衰

Jun
Posts: 27816
Joined: 2003-12-15 11:43

Re: 西方学者掀起恶意攻击,反证明我党治国有方

Post by Jun » 2014-08-25 10:46

我已经很久没回国了,但是在中文网站上小小地混着。常常觉得中国人跟美国人真是象,或许世界上的人都很象。但是又觉得在某些深处无意识的地方中国人还是有些不同,但这些不是文化差异,而是体制环境对人的思想和行为的影响。文革遗留的人际关系中的 paranoia 和 suspicion 已经逐渐退居到老一代人身上消失,而现在一代在 “绝对不许集会” (哪怕是网上的)制度下长大的人亦有其特点,不过我了解太少,也说不太上来。
此喵已死,有事烧纸

Post Reply