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Censorship in China
ChinaPolitics

Chinese writers steer path round censors to earn cash through apps

Bloggers turn to popular web platforms to connect with their readers and make a living – so long as they stay within the bounds of the ‘Great Firewall’

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Qiao Mu, pictured at his desk at his home in Beijing, where he now makes a living from essays posted on WeChat. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

When outspoken professor Qiao Mu posted his resignation letter on a popular Chinese messaging app, sympathetic readers tapped their phone screens to send him money, leaving him with a 20,000 yuan ($3,000) payday.

China’s widely used applications have given writers like Qiao an outlet to self-publish and make money – as long as their words respect the boundaries set by online censors inside the country’s “Great Firewall”.

With Facebook and Twitter blocked in China, they post their works on WeChat, a messaging service with over 900 million worldwide users, or Weibo, a microblogging website – both monitored by the Communist authorities.

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WeChat has over 900 million users worldwide, many of whom live in China. Photo: Imaginechina
WeChat has over 900 million users worldwide, many of whom live in China. Photo: Imaginechina

“I’m a typical Chinese person. I love my country and I want to change it. To reach the majority of the Chinese people I need to stay inside the Great Firewall and write in Chinese,” Qiao told AFP.

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Qiao, 47, quit his library job because he was fed up of doing dull translations after getting banned from teaching in 2014 for vague “work violations”.

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