Welcome to our project on Internet censorship in China. Our goal is to provide experts and novices alike with a better understanding of online censorship in the People's Republic of China by examining data on censored terms on WeChat. Our analysis relies on the keywords compiled by the Citizen Lab based in Toronto.
The Citizen Lab is an interdisciplinary laboratory based at the Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy, University of Toronto. More information can be found at their website.
It is common knowledge that China’s "Great Firewall" blocks many Western companies from reaching users in Mainland China. For example, The New York Times, BBC, The Washington Post, Google, Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat, and Instagram are all inaccessible from within Mainland China without a virtual private network (VPN), which are also illegal in Mainland China. However, many people outside of China are unaware that Chinese internet and social media apps are also subject to intensive government oversight. On social media platforms, the Chinese government censors sensitive key words, phrases, and images sent by users through the app.
While keywords, phrases, images, and urls are censored across all platforms in mainland China, this project focuses on the censorship data from the WeChat that is compiled through the Citizen Lab's research. The Citizen Lab tested some known censored topics by sending a sensitive message from a Canada based WeChat account to a Mainland China based account. They found that messages containing sensitive topics sent from one account were not received by the other account (see images below). The full report on this test can be found here.
The histogram shows the number of keywords censored in each given month. The high number of censored words for July 2016 may be due to the fact that the Citizen Lab's project began in July 2016, and so the first month reflects an accumulation of known banned topics rather than new censored words. The dataset can be found here.
This tree chart displays the censored keywords as part of categories and subcategories. In this way, we can see that censored keywords are often part of a larger strategy in censorship rather than an isolated incident. For example, our dataset indicates that the names of party leaders are among the most-frequently censored terms. This is noteworthy because they appear to be more frequently censored than many controversial topics, such as territorial or human rights issues. (Note that this chart includes most but not all terms from the dataset.)
Key:
Outside of China, people rely on a combination of Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, Twitter, and Whatsapp to stay in touch with friends and family and use apps like Uber, Lyft, Uber Eats, Venmo, Cashapp for other services. WeChat users can message each other, get news updates, order takeout, send money, order a taxi, or pay in store all in the WeChat app. The app is ubiquitous throughout Mainland China and is the primary way people communicate.
The Chat function operates the same as Facebook Messenger, iMessage, and WhatsApp; users are able to send messages, images, and files to other users on the platofrm. Users can also upload pictures to their "Moments" as non-Chinese upload pictures to their Instagram or Facebook "Story." From WeChat Pay, users can order food through mobile delivery, pay their phone bill, book a hotel, order a cab, and more. Users are able to deposit money into their Wallet on WeChat directly from their bank accounts. WeChat Pay is accepted as a form of payment by virtually every vendor in Mainland China. To pay, users need only have their QR code scanned by the vendor.