A collection of images censored on Sina Weibo - a popular
Twitter-like service in China - has been revealed.
The sample data - which was collected over two weeks -
contained dissidents, a yawning politician, and archive shots from the Korean
War.
Sina Weibo has some 500 million users in China, but is
closely monitored.
ProPublica selected a group of users that had previously had
material removed from the site, with a focus on journalists, lawyers and other
figures with significant numbers of followers.
The site - with help from the University of Hong Kong -
wrote some software that would store posts from the users, and then check on an
hourly basis to see if the posts had been removed.
Bo Xilai
What they found was a wide ranging selection of images deemed
not suitable for dissemination on the site.
The collection included images of Bo Xilai, the former
high-ranking Chinese politician, who was jailed in October for bribery,
embezzlement and abuse of power.
One deleted post had called for the trial to be broadcast
live, while another showed Bo with former US national security adviser Henry
Kissinger.
Pictures of other public figures, such as human rights
advocate Xu Zhiyong and activist singer Wu Hongfei, were also removed.
A large number of the censored posts monitored were of long
passages of text, ProPublica reported.
A service called Long Weibo - comparable to TwitLonger, an
equivalent service on Twitter - allows for posts that go beyond the service's
140-character limit by creating an image showing Chinese characters.
The popularity of Long Weibo has created a censorship
headache for authorities as it means banned words are not automatically
flagged.
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