China’s new regulation on ‘self media’ further stifling creativity
Previous incidents of getting censured led Ms Chen to hire the team of Chinese legal advisers, who she said came up with “close to 1,000” words and phrases.Violations can result in posts being deleted, temporary suspension of account, or even a total ban from the platform.
“He picks his battles to work around censorship and mainstream opinion,” wrote contributor Xu Tianyi on the China Talk newsletter, calling Mr Ren a “cosmopolitan patriot”.While popular posts usually get between 80,000 and 90,000 views, Mr Ren’s pieces about artificial intelligence and the property market attract between 4,000 and 5,000 views. AI has been a touchy subject in China because of the lack of regulation in this area.
“For some reason, because we are considered a broadcast product, we are not being regulated by the Cyberspace Administration of China, but instead the broadcast authorities, who might not monitor us as closely as the Internet platforms,” he said. Meanwhile, for Ms Lin, this is yet another sign of how Beijing is further stifling creativity in the media space.
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