China Digital Times (CDT)
Covering China from Cyberspace
it's an insane resources—if you've got a question about basically ANY major story on the Chinese internet/society/politics, there is a page on CDT contextualizing it with links to original source material. It's such a must-read (and don't forget to click into the 中文 site too: chinadigitaltimes.net)
27.01.2026 19:13
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Zhang Feng on China's New Media | China Books Review
The prolific social media blogger explains how censorship works in the era of WeChat, and talks us through a changing media landscape, in our new column on the biggest ideas out of China.
Our new column What China's Thinking is underpinned by the work of my former colleagues at @chinadigitaltimes.net
The superlative Chinese team & my friends/role models @samuelwa.de @cindycarter.bsky.social have contextualized so much of recent Chinese history
chinabooksreview.com/2026/01/27/w...
27.01.2026 19:11
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This roundup of 2025's most sensitive words (courtesy of CDT Chinese editors and @samuelwa.de) includes some new and increasingly abstruse Xi Jinping nicknames: i in ing, 123, 羽哥, 长生不老, 150岁, 新加坡, and more.
09.01.2026 02:19
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Some Zhihu comments: "For tourism, go to Russia; for work, to Myanmar; for business, to North Korea; for study abroad, go to Iran. These are the best options for today’s generation of young Chinese." "Why can’t they recommend a decent travel destination? What’ll they push next, North Korea or Iran?"
05.12.2025 23:11
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Netizen Voices: As Sino-Japanese Tensions Rise, “Tourism is Treated like a Chamberpot, a Disposable Tool”
The diplomatic crisis between China and Japan continues to intensify, following Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s affirmation last month of Japan’s willingness to defend Taiwan in the event of ...
From WeChat account Mulan’s Worldview: “The tourism industry in China is a chamberpot [...], picked up when needed, and cast aside when it is not. When it is needed to burnish political achievements, tourism is treated as a key driver of GDP growth, but at other times, it becomes a disposable tool."
05.12.2025 23:03
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Interview: Jessica Batke and Laura Edelson on China’s “Locknet”
In June, ChinaFile published a new report, "The Locknet: How China Controls Its Internet and Why It Matters"—the product of 18 months’ work by Jessica Batke, ChinaFile’s senior editor for investigatio...
Does "reincarnation" mean that the bans are no big deal? No. Porosity is a feature, not a bug (see link). As "Du Fu" writes above, bans mean deleted archives and severed connections. They serve as a deterrent to others. And the authorities can always come for you offline if they feel the need to.
03.12.2025 07:06
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Words of the Week: WeChat Account "New New New Silence" and China's Online "Reincarnation Party"
Last week’s CDT Chinese 404 Archives podcast highlighted the recent revival of the Silent Observer WeChat account. The account, which for several years has provided a platform for philosophically-incl...
Some banned users number their new accounts. Another went from "Silent Observer" to "New Silence," "New New Silence," and now "New New New Silence." Another approach: "Du Fu’s life took him from Shihao Village to Huanhua Creek, and on to Baidi Fortress. So now there’s Du Fu of Baidi Fortress."
03.12.2025 06:55
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"Du Fu wrote 'The state broken, its mountains and rivers remain,' and 'Crimson gates reek with meat and ale, while on the streets are bones of the frozen dead.' Certain people would have called this 'negative energy.' But a thousand years on, it's positive energy that schoolchildren learn by heart."
03.12.2025 03:36
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Some interesting reflections on the fire from mainland voices. Some mourn Hong Kong's "mainlandisation," as well as the dead; others still see and envy some relative openness there. One is very annoyed with people suggesting that the fire was started by Japanese spies.
02.12.2025 23:04
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"When major accidents like this have happened in the past, we’ve always heard: 'Now is the time for all-out rescue efforts. Please don’t analyze causes, assign blame, or speculate about the disaster.' Those who did these things were accused of hindering the response, or harboring ulterior motives."
02.12.2025 19:46
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(That was actually his response to the second ban, when New Silence, formerly Silent Observer and now New New New Silence, became New New Silence.)
19.11.2025 19:34
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Editor of account recently revived after a third ban: "What would you do if years of painstaking effort were wiped out in an instant? Cry and wail and curse your fate? Sink into dejection and give up? No. The late Ming historian Tan Qian had an inspiring answer: count to four, and start again."
19.11.2025 19:32
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Come for the zesty array of censorship evasion techniques, stay for the tiny thumbnail of an “I Took Part In The Reciprocal Tariff War of April, 2025 And All I Got Was This Lousy Mug” mug.
31.10.2025 15:59
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“Q: What’s your opinion on public account posts getting shot down?
A: I have no opinion, and feel nothing but gratitude toward the public account platform.”
30.10.2025 05:33
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Includes strong commentary from Bitter Winter: "The CCP isn’t just watching your prayers—it’s editing them … Religion isn’t just Sinicized. It’s sanitized, standardized, and subordinated. And if you’re wondering who’s really being worshipped, just look at the podium" bitterwinter.org/red-is-the-n...
17.10.2025 23:35
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A lot of good stuff in here. One thing is that Chinese anxiety about how its education system compares with other countries feels strikingly parallel to other countries' anxieties about how their education systems compare with China's.
21.10.2025 03:27
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"I truly don’t know what kind of sentiment would lead certain people to compare the sight of a massive nighttime traffic jam at some highway toll gates with a 'galaxy of glittering stars.' All the scene really stirs in me is a headache, backache, and the sensation of an uncomfortably full bladder."
16.10.2025 05:19
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"Topics targeted included multiplatform bans on influencers; Nepal protests; labor rights for delivery riders; pressure on citizen journalism; problems in official news coverage; economic prospects and precarity; domestic violence; a hazardous waste accident; official misconduct; & patriotic cinema"
15.10.2025 02:38
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China's online influencers are finding it harder than ever to navigate the "red lines":
"[Recent state-media] criticisms of Zhang Xuefeng [...are] no different from the Cultural Revolution-era practices of 'criticism for the sake of criticism' and 'elevating all issues to the level of politics.'"
07.10.2025 23:37
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Streets are still closed off in front of the Portland ICE facility at 8:30pm. Protesters have gathered on a side street. Dance party in progress.
08.10.2025 03:31
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China's online influencers are finding it harder than ever to navigate the "red lines":
"[Recent state-media] criticisms of Zhang Xuefeng [...are] no different from the Cultural Revolution-era practices of 'criticism for the sake of criticism' and 'elevating all issues to the level of politics.'"
07.10.2025 23:37
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Chinese internet users express frustration over the de-platforming of some frugal and very laid-back gamers. One online comment: "You can’t be a slacker, can’t be materialistic, you just have to keep working and grinding away. [...] All we can do is wait until they grind us down to nothing."
26.09.2025 23:28
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Texas Tech Moves to Limit Academic Discussion to 2 Genders
“I’m emotionally shellshocked right now,” said one professor in the Texas Tech system. “What does it say about academic freedom? It says we don’t have it.” The professor spoke by phone from the inside of a car to avoid being overheard by colleagues.
www.nytimes.com/2025/09/26/u...
26.09.2025 23:49
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