Government Gets Big Into Microblogging

胡泳 原创自 搜狐博客 | 2011-01-20 00:17 | 收藏 | 投票

   

http://blogs.wsj.com/chinarealtime/2011/01/14/government-gets-big-into-microblogging/

January 14, 2011, 3:46 PM HKT

Government Gets Big Into Microblogging

China Real Time Report

Reform-minded observers of Chinese media have characterized the rise of microblogging in the Middle Kingdom as a boon to dissidents and a challenge to the ruling regime. But, according to a report by the country’s state-run news agency, Chinese authorities aren’t ready to cede the technology to their critics.

Hundreds of public security bureaus in China have launched their own microblogs, Xinhua said this week, as part of an attempt to better connect with the country’s tech-savvy online population while also leveraging social media as means to solving criminal cases.

So far, the effort seems to garnering some success: “Safe Beijing,” the official microblog of the Beijing public security bureau, has attracted more than 330,000 followers since its debut in August 2010.

The number of registered microblog users in China grew to 75 million in 2010, from 8 million in 2009, according to a recent report by market research firm Analysys International, and that figure is expected to 240 million in 2012. Microblogs, known as “weibo” in Mandarin, are fast becoming one of the primary means by which Chinese web users access news and information with services like Sina.com’s Sina Weibo playing an increasingly important role in pushing news coverage of major public affairs.

One of last year’s most noted news stories, the self-immolation of three Chinese citizens in the Jiangxi Province county of Yihuang who were protesting the forced demolition of their home, first broke and spread on microblogs, forcing mainstream media to break a government-imposed silence (in Chinese). In another notable story, blogger and “science cop” Fang Zhouzi, known for exposing academic fraud, launched a public outcry and major police investigation late last August after revealing details of a violent attack against him on Sina Weibo account.

The ability of microblogs to speed the flow of information has proven a headache for China’s censors, leading Internet scholars like Beijing University’s Hu Yong to argue that the technology offers “new possibilities for reshaping China’s authoritarian regime.” One way it appears to be reshaping the regime is by forcing government departments to be more responsive. The Beijing police department, for example, made an announcement (in Chinese) on its official microblog account shortly after arresting suspects in the Fang Zhouzi case.

The first police department to launch an official microblog was the public security bureau in Zhaoqing City in south China’s Guangdong Province, which opened an account on the Sina service in February 2010. Since then, around 500 more microblogs have been opened by local police authorities throughout the country, with some notable success stories.

Police from the coastal city of Xiamen, said that their microblog account helped them catch the murderers of a three-year-old girl after they used it to release details about the murder along with an offer of 5,000 yuan for further information. The message was forwarded more than 10,000 times, according to a report by China Daily, leading to more than 100 pieces of information police used in solving the case six days later.

Other local government agencies have also turned to microblogs as a way to push out policy announcements and other information, as well as hear complaints from the public. According to Sina’s statistics, 139 government departments and 56 transportation departments have opened Sina Weibo accounts, including the provincial government in Yunnan, whose account has racked up more than 48,800 followers since opening in June last year.

“It’s set to be an ongoing trend given that the way people obtain information has changed,” said Zhang Yanan, analyst with Beijing-based venture capital research firm Zero2IPO. The microblog population has reached critical mass in China Zhang added, with users in the critical 30 to 40 age group increasing quickly.

Public response to the government microblog phenomenon has been mixed. Many Chinese citizens applaud the effort by government departments to engage online, saying that the new technology will help change the stubbon image of government officials and better interact with the public. “Government officials not concerned primarily with keeping their jobs but instead interacting with the public and developing a better understanding of the people’s condition–it’s an improvement,” one Sina user from Guangdong wrote in response to a recent article on the trend.

Some, however, argue that the use of microblogs in and of itself does not make for better government.

“In many cases, government departments without microblog accounts think about the interests of the general public, while those with microblogs aren’t necessarily serving the public,” writes blogger Zhang Lechen (in Chinese). “I hope it is not for show.”

– Juliet Ye. Follow her on Twitter @wsj_jul

 

个人简介
价值中国网荣誉总编辑。北京大学新闻与传播学院教授,政治学博士。中国传播学会常务理事,中国网络传播学会常务理事。“信息社会50人论坛”成员。中国信息经济学会信息社会研究所学术委员会主席。世界经济论坛社交媒体全球议程…
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