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Pinduoduo under fire for online bookshops selling pirated books

CHINA / SOCIETY By Global Times Published: Mar 16, 2021 10:18 PM Over 4,500 pirated books were destroyed at a printing shop in Fuzhou, East China s Jiangxi Province on April 23, 2020. Photo: VCG  Pirated books sold on China s e-commerce platform Pinduoduo exposed by a social media article brought the piracy issue of books back into the media spotlight recently.  The editorial office of the WeChat public account Young Caijing exposed in its article that over 500 books it purchased on China s e-commerce platform Pinduoduo turned out to be pirated ones.  Young Caijing complained to the online bookshops but only received a reply saying that they could be refunded, while the Pinduoduo platform replied that pirated books are not counterfeit products. 

CDT Censorship Digest, December 2020: The Rumble in the CCP s Narrative Machine

Posted by Josh Rudolph | Jan 14, 2021 The CDT Censorship Digest is a monthly round-up of censored speech, propaganda developments, and rights defense in China, compiled and written by CDT Chinese editors. We have selected, translated, and adapted relevant and interesting portions of the digest for our English readers, and encourage you to  On December 20, 2020, renowned East Asia scholar and Harvard University professor Ezra Vogel died at age 90. In a With these words [on the rapid increase in economic livelihood, education. and longevity since 1989] Vogel indicates that he basically accepts an argument that the Communist Party’s Propaganda Department has been making for the past twenty years: that “stability” and economic growth show that the repression at Tiananmen was justified in the long run. When foreign dignitaries or journalists have asked about the massacre, the response of Party leaders has been consistent: if Deng Xiaoping had not taken “resolute” (i.e.,

Chinese Twitter-like Weibo punished for overlooking pornographic content

s3-news-tmp-75806-untitled design 2 1 2x1 940 BEIJING, Jan 15 (Xinhua): Chinese Twitter-like social media platform Weibo received administrative punishment for failing to block the dissemination of pornographic and vulgar content on its platform, China s anti-pornography watchdog said on Friday. According to an investigation organized by the National Office for the Fight Against Pornography and Illegal Publications, multiple registered Weibo users posted materials that contain pornographic content on the platform between December 2018 and December 2020. The operator of Weibo, a Beijing-based Internet company, was given administrative punishment on Jan. 4 for failing to deal with such posts on the platform properly. Over the past year, China cracked six criminal cases of disseminating pornographic and illegal information on Weibo, according to the office.

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