Advertisement
Advertisement
Tech CEOs
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more

New | Zuckerberg hosts Chinese internet regulator, 'buys Xi Jinping's book' for Facebook staff

Move interpreted as an effort by Zuckerberg to court the government of China, where Facebook is blocked

Tech CEOs
AP

A Chinese government news portal released a photo Monday of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg with a copy of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s book on governance at his desk while hosting the country’s top internet regulator.

Zuckerberg, who has long sought market access to China, where Facebook is blocked, was quoted by China.com.cn as saying he purchased several copies of Xi’s book so he and colleagues could learn about “socialism with Chinese characteristics”.

The California-based company did not immediately respond to inquiries regarding the visit to Facebook’s offices by Internet regulator Lu Wei.

China.com.cn said Zuckerberg gave Lu a tour of Facebook’s office in Putonghua.

The gesture, interpreted as an effort by Zuckerberg to court the government, disappointed and angered activists in China, who have long held the social networking company in high regard for its ability to share information beyond the tight controls of the ruling Communist Party.

“Mr Zuckerberg is either ignorant of China’s politics or shameless,” said prominent dissident Hu Jia, who called Lu a top enemy of Internet freedom and expressed worry that technology giants such as Facebook were kowtowing to Beijing for their own business interests. “He is an Internet genius who should understand the power of technology for social change.”

WATCH: Mark Zuckerberg speaks Putronghua at a Chinese university forum

China.com.cn, controlled by China’s Internet Information Office and another government agency, said the photo was taken at Facebook’s Menlo Park office and that Xi’s book The Governance of China was at Zuckerberg’s workstation when he hosted Lu.

“I bought this book for my colleagues as well,” Zuckerberg was quoted as telling Lu. “I want them to understand socialism with Chinese characteristics.”

The photo shows a beaming Lu sitting in Zuckerberg’s work chair, with the Facebook founder smiling and standing next to him.

“In that photo, Lu Wei looks the part of a boss,” Hu said in a phone interview. “I feel ashamed for Facebook and sorry for Mr Zuckerberg. When you yield to the executioners of the internet, they will only become more arrogant.”

A cartoon posted online showed Zuckerberg in a Chinese military outfit holding a bayonet and clutching Xi’s book to his chest. Some commenters joked that he was close to joining the Communist Party of China, although others suggested that Zuckerberg might have placed Xi’s book on his desk merely for show.

It was not clear when the visit took place, but Lu was in the United States last week to attend a Chinese-American internet conference at which Beijing pushed for a louder voice in the management of the Internet.

China also argued in favour of the concept of “information sovereignty,” which could help justify its tight controls over Internet information.

Zuckerberg surprised Chinese college students in Beijing in October when he chatted with them for 30 minutes in Putonghua, in a move widely seen as an attempt to court Chinese good will.

 

Post