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Protests are sweeping heavily censored China. How will American institutions respond?
You鈥檝e likely seen something unusual taking place this week. Thousands of people in cities and universities across China have joined 鈥 sparked by a in Urumqi, which many fear was worsened by the country鈥檚 pandemic lockdown policies 鈥 that are blossoming into broader protests decrying zero-COVID rules, authoritarianism, and, in some cases, President Xi Jinping specifically.
Seeking to both avoid and subvert the country鈥檚 notorious censorship policies, protesters have been carrying of paper to acknowledge those who died in the fire and all the words protesters themselves are not allowed to voice. As it turns out, sometimes silence speaks volumes.
The country鈥檚 have worked even more aggressively than usual to match the glut of protest content being uploaded online. Popular microblogging platform Weibo is removing all evidence of protest footage, and WeChat and other apps show skewed results for the phrase 鈥渨hite paper.鈥
How the infamously authoritarian Chinese Communist Party will respond in the coming days is not yet clear, though activity and surveillance are already increasing. Activists and advocates are watching with great concern that the CCP will respond heavy-handedly, as it has against past protests 鈥 with brutal, violent results.
Here in the United States, it鈥檚 worth asking how American institutions will respond to protests that raise uncomfortable issues for industries that frequently seek to avoid offending or opposing the CCP to protect their access to China 鈥 and sometimes even aid its censorship efforts.
Apple limits AirDrop 鈥 and its protest capabilities
Like , Apple鈥檚 to China鈥檚 censorship rules in recent years is , sometimes even going what is likely required by authorities. Just this month, Apple upped the ante when it , a feature on iPhones that allows file-sharing to nearby Apple devices, so that users in China would have their AirDrop settings automatically turn off public availability after 10 minutes.
Emerson College investigates, suspends conservative student group for stickers criticizing China鈥檚 government
Press Release
In 2019, Hong Kong鈥檚 protesters used AirDrop to organize and share information about as police crackdowns against them increased. More recently, individuals in mainland China used AirDrop to share critical of President Xi, referencing a lone individual鈥檚 daring protest on Beijing鈥檚 Sitong Bridge ahead of the CCP鈥檚 20th National Congress in October of this year.
Curiously, Apple rolled out its new AirDrop restrictions in China only weeks after protesters used the tool to amplify the Sitong Bridge protest. The change will reportedly become Apple鈥檚 standard rule in the future 鈥 but the feature was rushed out only to Chinese phones, and done unexpectedly.
That the rollout was done so quickly after AirDrop was used to share anti-government images, and will now limit a tool that could鈥檝e been utilized by China鈥檚 growing contingent of protesters, raises eyebrows. The CCP is responsible for the censorship it forces upon its own people, but it has certainly been aided by tech companies, including those in the United States, willing to either directly work to advance such censorship or to abide by such laws to retain market access.
More American tech and social media companies will likely face censorship and obfuscation and demands if these protests continue. FIREwill be watching to see how they respond.
How will protests fare as they bloom across U.S. campuses?
As FIREhas pointed out many times, the Chinese government is an increasingly sore subject on campus. Among students, disputes over what can be said about China are escalating, often resulting in outright demands for administrative censorship of the CCP鈥檚 critics. FIRElike the at George Washington University fear being unmasked by administrators and their peers 鈥 their only way to speak freely is through anonymity.
Even worse, college administrators have actively censored student and faculty speech about China. In the case of Emerson College, the school punished a student group for distributing anti-CCP stickers 鈥 and then hid Twitter replies condemning its actions and even those referencing Winnie the Pooh, whose image has been used to mock Xi Jinping.
To put it mildly, universities, many of which maintain extensive ties to the country, frequently fall short of their commitment to free speech when it comes to political speech about China.
Universities now face another test as these onto campuses around the world, including in the U.S., and provoke a strong showing of support for Chinese dissenters and of backlash from their opponents. FIREwill keep a close eye on these developments to ensure universities abide by their legal and moral obligations to free expression, and respect students鈥 right to protest and to speak anonymously.
Any students who experience, or are threatened with, censorship should immediately contact 果冻传媒app官方. You have the right to express yourself 鈥 and, in the case of these protests, hold signs that pointedly speak no words at all.
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