Michael Anti: Behind the Great Firewall of China
Michael Anti: Za velikim požarnim kitajskim zidom
Michael Anti (Zhao Jing), a key figure in China's new journalism, explores the growing power of the Chinese internet. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
veliko pogovorov o Kitajski.
kitajskem internetu.
svetovne gospodarske razmere.
Facebookovih delnic za javnost.
Kitajska in Severna Koreja.
močno obzidje.
internetnih uporabnikov.
oz. uporabnikov interneta.
zelo preprosta -
prenehal delovati na Kitajskem,
teh dveh polov.
spletne storitve z bazo v ZDA
da postanejo resnično javne družbene sfere,
nočna mora kitajskih uradnikov.
10 milijonov kritik,
trdih delcih PM 2,5.
ki kažejo vrednost 50.
lahko se zadržujemo zunaj.
ali stavek s kratko povezavo.
izvirnega Twitterja.
in življenje na Kitajskem.
sredstvo zunaj sodnega sistema,
želela ohranjati mit:
vložili prošnjo na osrednjo vlado,
profesorjem ali znanim osebam.
po priimkih glavnih vodij.
kar posnema izraz za
je torej zelo domiseln.
strani Twitter.com.
morebitno politično vsebino.
metode iskanja podatkov kot v romanu 1984.
a kitajska mačka ni edina,
v petih dnevih,
končati z neodvisnostjo njegove uprave.
privilegiranih članov Partije.
te politične privilegirance.
ali omenjati zaigran udar
in natačno določeno okno.
nekaj normalnega.
levičarskega voditelja,
za politični boj.
poteptal vse lokalne vlade.
njihovega državljanstva,
za utrjevanje svoje premoči
in drugačnim skupinam.
da so mišini prijatelji,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Michael Anti - BloggerMichael Anti (Zhao Jing), a key figure in China's new journalism, explores the growing power of the Chinese internet.
Why you should listen
One morning in 2011, Michael Anti woke up to find himself a nonperson: His Facebook profile, with 1,000+ contacts, had been suspended. Anti, whose given name is Zhao Jing, ran up against Facebook's real-name policy--but he points out that for Chinese bloggers and information activists, the pseudonym is an important protection for the free exchange of information.
Facebook itself is blocked in China (along with Twitter and YouTube), but the country boasts some 500 million netizens--including 200 million microbloggers on sites like Sina Weibo, a freewheeling though monitored platform for text and photo updates that offers, perhaps for the first time, a space for public debate in China. It's not a western-style space, Anti clarifies, but for China it is revolutionary: It's the first national public sphere. Microblogs' role became clear in the wake of the high-speed train crash in Wenzhou in 2011, when Weibo became a locus of activism and complaint--and a backchannel that refuted official reports and has continued to play a key role in more recent events.
Michael Anti | Speaker | TED.com