EastSouthWestNorth: Search Engines vs. Spammers in China

From The Southern Weekend (in Chinese), translated by EastSouthWestNorth: There is a vast amount of economic interests behind the search engines, since being found by a search engine is an important method of increasing the number of hits to a website. Search engines are also important indicators in the “economy of attention” on the Internet. […]

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Christine Chiao and Cissy Wang: China’s Evolving Blogosphere

From The Asia Pacific Media Network: The popularity of blogs has garnered attention of another kind: the government is now taking steps to ensure that the sites are under their radar. China’s Ministry of Information Industry (MII) mandated the registration of all websites and web log host sites in the country before the June 30, […]

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China Daily: Drag Queen underworld in China soliciting tolerance

From China Daily: Through Chinese filmmaker Jiang Zhi’s film, Our Love, the hidden voice of China’s drag queens finally reaches the ears of ordinary society. Based on the lives of three real queens living in Shenzhen’s underworld, the film is half-documentary, half-fiction. Sections of it are filmed in a talk show question-and-answer style, while fictional […]

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Tyler Bridges: Latin Americans say si to learning Chinese

From the Miami Herald: Once considered too difficult and virtually useless by many Latin Americans, Chinese is quickly becoming the second language of choice for a growing number of people in the region as Beijing’s economic boom has dramatically increased trade and investments with the mostly Spanish-speaking continent. Three to five times more Latin Americans […]

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Gavin Clarke: Google lands Microsoftie to head China R&D

From the Register: Google has poached the founder of Microsoft Research’s Chinese facility to set-up and run its own Chinese R&D operations. Dr Kai-Fu Lee was Tuesday morning named head of a planned product and research development center in China, due to open in the third quarter, with Lee also planned to head-up Google’s Chinese […]

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David Barboza: Deals by new bank stars transform China economy

From the International Herald Tribune: They grew up during China’s Cultural Revolution, when Mao Zedong’s brutal political campaigns in the 1960’s and 1970’s tore apart families, pitting children against their parents and husbands against their wives. Today, they are some of the most powerful deal makers in China, a group of rich and politically astute […]

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Tom Walsh: Fear China, but don’t be in a panic

From the Detroit Free Press: Should we worry that the emergence of China and its 2 billion people as a global economic power will mean fewer jobs and lower wages for years, maybe decades to come, in Michigan? Or should we accept the inevitability of China’s rise, quit sniveling and go capture as much business […]

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Edward Cody: A Chinese Riot Rooted in Confusion

From the Washington Post: The riot, on the morning of June 3, had its roots in the refusal of China’s government to permit the establishment of any independent organization, including nongovernment labor unions, as a reliable, independent channel for workers’ grievances. It was a shocking first for Xizhou, a raw industrial zone on the northeastern […]

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Matt Young: China’s five-star clinics offer health for wealth

From Asia Times Online: Notorious for lagging behind international standards, elite healthcare has gone high-end on the mainland, most visibly in the form of private clinics in luxury hotels. The St Regis is the latest to offer both butler, and clinical, services. In June, United Family Hospitals and Clinics expanded its Chinese facilities – already […]

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Howard W. French: Riots in a Village in China as Pollution Protest Heats Up

From the New York Times: After three nights of increasingly heavy rioting, the police were taking no chances on Monday, deploying dozens of busloads of officers before dusk and blocking eve Protesters, who say the pharmaceuticals factory at Xinchang pollutes their water, were blocked on Monday by police barricades. There is rising discontent in China […]

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Tyler Marshall: Building a Bridge to China

From The LA Times (Sub. Required): The United States is preparing to open a new diplomatic front in its increasingly complex relationship with China in an effort to reduce the danger of a major miscalculation between the two giants. Unlike current contacts that focus on specific economic, political and security issues, the new dialogue will […]

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Jim Jubak: China: the dragon that isn’t

From MSN Money: China is not as big an economic threat to the United States as some of you seem to think. In fact, I think China is looking at a horrific double-barreled economic crisis over the next 30 years. The real danger to the United States is that the Chinese won’t figure out how […]

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