December 20, 2022

"On Christmas Day in 2010, a short, bespectacled 27-year-old Chinese programmer named Zhang Yiming logged onto Douban, a Chinese hybrid of Rotten Tomatoes and Goodreads..."

"... to share his thoughts on a movie he had just watched. Zhang used his Douban account as a chronicle of his personal development, recording the books he wanted to read ('What Would Google Do?' 'Catch-22' and 'The Road to Serfdom') and the movies he’d seen ('The Departed,' 'Good Will Hunting,' 'Inception'). The movie Zhang watched that Christmas was 'The Social Network.' The movie was of particular interest to Zhang.... Born in 1983 as the only son of a librarian and a nurse, Zhang came of age in a China flush with reform and newfound connections to the West.... Zhang loved the freedom that technology offered and displayed a fondness for the West, politically as well as culturally. In 2009, when Chinese authorities blocked access to several websites, he took to his personal blog to voice his disapproval, according to a Wall Street Journal profile. 'Go out and wear a T-shirt supporting Google,' he wrote. 'If you block the internet, I’ll write what I want to say on my clothes.'..."

Much more about Zhang and the app he created in "How TikTok Became a Diplomatic Crisis/A Chinese app conquered the planet — and now the U.S. is threatening to shut it down. Can the world’s biggest virality machine survive?" (NYT). 

Just one more snippet: "Gliding across cultures as a kind of internet-era anthropologist was part of what made working at TikTok interesting and novel. When the app was first introduced, every country and every market had a slightly different proclivity. Thai users liked videos of people dancing at school; Japanese users preferred funny videos about otaku, young people obsessed with anime, manga and video games; Vietnamese users especially enjoyed deft camera work. The United States proved harder to crack, until TikTok’s product managers let the users drive the creation of a new category — Americans, it turned out, had an unusual attachment to memes."

19 comments:

Dear corrupt left, go F yourselves said...

I wonder is the US(our fake Democracy) has surpassed China when it comes to spying and control of the people and their thoughts.

Kate said...

In other words, we like cope.

Mike (MJB Wolf) said...

Cool a sweet little origin story for TikTok. Forget about the CIA and FBI spying on your social media and censoring news disfavorable to democrats and bask in the glow of this spunky programmer who just wanted to give people like you a voice. And it all started as a Christmas Miracle. Awwwww ain’t it just so warm and fuzzy.

rcocean said...

ITs crazy that people want to ban Tik-tok. I guess Zuckerberg and Google have been spreading the bribe money around.

Birches said...

This sounds like their SBF puff pieces.

Lurker21 said...

'Go out and wear a T-shirt supporting Google,' he wrote. 'If you block the internet, I’ll write what I want to say on my clothes.'..."

Geez, everything really is upside down in China.

Dear corrupt left, go F yourselves said...

You will adore Biden - because he adores you. He cares!

Non-stop media BS.

Iman said...

Pick your poison.

planetgeo said...

As a refugee myself, I offer the following observation. The United States is not a place. It is the natural human yearning to be free. Its enemies, foreign and domestic, will never understand that. It can never be defeated. It will exist as along as any humans are left on Earth.

Temujin said...

The softer, feel-good side of TikTok. The founder even read Friedrich Hayek which, I suspect would land him in purgatory with his new masters. It would certainly not be a book to read in public in China. Or on the campus at Stanford.

We all start with the best intentions. And then the totalitarians jump in.

MB said...

I'm on my lunch break at work and can't read the article right now. I'll try to remember to look at it after I get home. I'm curious if I'll be able to see any part of it that wouldn't be there if it were written by the Chinese government instead of the NYT.

Rusty said...

planetgeo said...
Hence all the firearms in the hands of citizens.

Rusty said...

Lurker21 said...
'Go out and wear a T-shirt supporting Google,' he wrote. 'If you block the internet, I’ll write what I want to say on my clothes.'..."

"Geez, everything really is upside down in China."
Ya been alseep? Look what's going on here! Oh. Wait. Sarcasm. Got it.

Rusty said...

Lurker21 said...
'Go out and wear a T-shirt supporting Google,' he wrote. 'If you block the internet, I’ll write what I want to say on my clothes.'..."

"Geez, everything really is upside down in China."
Ya been alseep? Look what's going on here! Oh. Wait. Sarcasm. Got it.

Mikey NTH said...

No communication service in China or based on a Chinese company is free from CCP control.

If Twitter was so in bed with the FBI how far into TikTok is the CCP?

cubanbob said...

Mikey NTH said...
No communication service in China or based on a Chinese company is free from CCP control.

If Twitter was so in bed with the FBI how far into TikTok is the CCP?"

And how far is the CCP into the DoJ and the FBI?

cubanbob said...

Mikey NTH said...
No communication service in China or based on a Chinese company is free from CCP control.

If Twitter was so in bed with the FBI how far into TikTok is the CCP?"

And how far is the CCP into the DoJ and the FBI?

boatbuilder said...

"The United States proved harder to crack, until TikTok’s product managers let the users drive the creation of a new category — Americans, it turned out, had an unusual attachment to memes."

Is that how they got you, Althouse?

Josephbleau said...

I am not aware of another country that has a 1st amendment ban on government restrictions on the press. If their citizens want freedom of speech they are out of luck, they have to personally fight for it, not like us in the US where their ancestors gave it to them intact.

But no one values for long what is given for free, so we are loosing our given freedom to the government.

To the glory of the founders, the courts are the only branch that is saving our freedoms. But, end the deference to the DC courts. Randomly assign governance cases to the federal seats of the hinterland.