The Chinese government fabricates and posts several hundred million social media posts each year to influence public opinion about the country, according to a new paper by US researchers examining one of the most opaque aspects of the Chinese Communist Party’s rule.
The study led by Harvard political scientist Gary King claims to be one of the first in-depth looks into the inner workings of China’s push to influence public opinion by flooding social media with posts portrayed as if they were coming from ordinary people.
Aside from having sophisticated censorship controls to find and delete content outright, the Chinese government has long been known to employ a huge group of Internet workers, known colloquially as the “Fifty Cent Party,” to influence discourse in subtler ways. The name originates from a popular rumor — never substantiated — that such people are paid 0.5 yuan (US$0.08) per pro-government post.
The research project, which took advantage of a trove of government e-mails, spreadsheets and work reports from a propaganda office in central China leaked online in 2014, concludes that an estimated 488 million fake posts per year “enables the government to actively control opinion without having to censor as much as they might otherwise.”
The researchers also reached a slightly surprising conclusion about the goal of the massive operation: to “distract the public” during politically sensitive news events. That counters the widespread perception that Beijing employs Internet workers to shout down its critics on online forums.
“They do not step up to defend the government, its leaders and their policies from criticism, no matter how vitriolic; indeed, they seem to avoid controversial issues entirely,” the paper’s authors wrote. “Letting an argument die, or changing the subject, usually works much better than picking an argument and getting someone’s back up.”
The paper detailed the methodology used by the research team. After gaining a glimpse into how the Fifty Cent operation organizes itself from leaked documents, the research group created numerous fake accounts of their own to ask large samples of suspected government workers an elaborate set of questions to confirm that the posters were indeed getting guidance from authorities.
One of the three coauthors, Margaret Roberts from the University of California, San Diego, said in an e-mail that examining leaked documents or interviewing former participants could offer a biased view of the operation, but “large-scale statistical analysis of online data allow us to directly observe and summarize what people within the system are doing.”
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