Bingchun MENG: Riding on eMule: A case study on the file sharing community in China

a coherent flow – yesterday macro-level big picture; today micro-level analyses more at the civil or civic level.

pilot study of a bigger scale research. clarifications: 1. emule is really an representative term to refer to a large number of p2p file sharing sites; 2. focuses on subtitles groups in the file sharing community.

why study it? how ict contributes to the decentralized form of media production and consumption. one particular form is p2p file sharing. such file sharing is illegal coz it violates copyright law. she wants to question coping with the new comm spaces using established institutions (laws and regulations).

trading digital products as commodified objects? the main question is what is the context contributes to the formation of these groups? why do ppl want to contribute? what are the mechanisms to coordinate the cooperation and keep the quality? what is the insight these groups can provide to ICTs in china.

method: filedwork in April 2009.

refers to jack’s comments about not taking china too seriously.

analytical framework: western theories and their applicability in china. henry jenkins on convergence culture. http://www.amazon.com/Convergence-Culture-Where-Media-Collide/dp/0814742815
benkler’s the wealth of network. http://www.amazon.com/Wealth-Networks-Production-Transforms-Markets/dp/0300125771/ref=pd_sim_b_3

findings: 1. why this becomes popular? the state-controlled media do not satisfy the needs. audience’s demand is important motives. personal interest such as fans of american dramas or foreign movies is another reason. 2. the extent of coordination among the groups. there are three or four major subtitle groups. there is fierce competition among them for recognition or reputation, not for material gains. e.g., within each group, there are three to four subgroups. one is responsible for moving the content from the servers, one for translation, etc. within the translation group, there are even divisions of languages such as english and korean. still another group is in charge of sychnronizing subtiltes and videos. a final group on disseminating the subtitles to forums and online spaces. 3. the incentives of the volunteer participation. non-material incentives beomce prominent in cyberspace. it challenges the bases of copyright law and the right it protects, which are often material-related.

conclusion – implications of this study. 1. quesionts the traditional notion of copyright 2. alternative mechanism of media production and distribution (non-state, non-commercial) 3. community with weak ties and interest-oriented communities. the volunteers do not know each other in most cases. but the weak ties indeed are able to mobilize collective efforts and to coordinate with each other.

JIANG Fei: Game Between “Quan” and “Shi”: Research on “Shanzhai” Culture in China Cyber SpacePost-Olympic Cultur

Quan = Power, Shi = ? maybe a bit like the influence of power, Shanzhai = copycat knock-off

we are limited by the visions and the datasets when it comes to internet research.

he shows the pictures of the shanzhai phenomenon such as double ms that look very simliar to mcdonald’s m. pizzahut to pizzahuff. all kinds of replications of bird nets. netizens make shanzhai lecture to pk cctv. shanzhai version of cdream of red mansions.

the climax to shanzhai culture: shanzhai spring festival evening gala. www.ccstv.net

responses to it: Ni Ping, the former anchor of Spring Festival Gala, absolutely boycotts the shanzhai culture. Director Zhang Yimou wants to leave it alone. Han Han, the famous blogger, thinks no shangzhai, no new china coz everything was copied from other countries. Yin Hong, a scholar, said only elite and modern culture should be the mainstream.

Jiang’s point of view – the event itself is an etertainment event among netizens. it is a chinese robinhood. it is an adult ceremony for chinese netizens. there should be a conexistance of both shanzhai and mainstream culture.

the relationship beween quan and shi in china should be examined against the chinese culture. The seal as the sign of power in history. shi means treatments one accpeted once the person got the quan. the shift of quan and shi in china. gov has quan whereas netizens have shi. if the gov can win the support from the netizens, it will have both quan and shi.

conclusion – shanzhai culture is inevitable. the idea of quan and shi is necessary to under cyber culture in china.

XIN Xin, University of Westminster: Web 2.0, Grassroots Journalism and Social Justice in China

during the olympics, the control over internet was loosened. the function of web 2.0 in empowering political activists should not be over-stated. this paper shows CJ functions as an alternative to MJ. Both CJ and MJ may fail in challenging chinese info control. Case study is used in this paper.

Case 1: Zuola Zhou and his blog. CJ is an important source to the MJ. CJ plays a watchdog role however it is far from challenging or changing the state.

Case 2: CJ as an alternative medium to distribution info by MJ journalists. 2008 Shangxi event. 1. the boundary between CJ and MJ is not clear-cut 2. the fudemental approach to reporting the events in china does not change – draw attention from central gov to publish the bad guys at the lower level, rather than criticizing the whole system

Case 3: the milk scandal. both CJ and MJ fail to inform citizens about the event.

Panel 2 Q&A

Q: What do you think about the difference between the theories of collective action in the context of virtual communities? 

WZ: No words in one definition of conceptualization refer to agency or consciousness – so that what we normally understand about collective action is that it is about achieving some sort of collective end. So Weiyu points to an idea of “collective intelligent design,” and how SNS can have mechanisms that suggest relevant content users. 

Q: For Weiyu: One could argue that all social networks are about relationships. Lam: where did you do your fieldwork and what were your implements? Continue reading

Panel 2 Respondent: Michael DELLI CARPINI, University of Pennsylvania

Michael Delli Carpini responds with some commentary about the papers and their implications.  He applauds the papers in format and substance, reminding us that we’re only getting an excerpt of the papers based on the presentations.

For Jiang’s paper, Michael acknoweldges her “important move” in making a distinction between different types of Internet sites, such as the collocated v. distributed diaspora sites she discusses in the paper.  As with many empirical studies, the difficulties of self-selection are a limit to what kinds of implications we can make with these data sets.  Nonetheless, the conclusion that the real value of building social capital is to connect to a real (physical and virtual) community is important.  To really make that case, though, Michael suggests that we should look to collocated web sites and compare that with those who are in the physical community but do not go online.

Michael considers Sunny’s paper in some ways a “poignant” paper about the role of ICTs in trying to maintain the familial solidarity so integral to Chinese culture.  It’s an almost ethnographic approach that consequently brings a rich flavor to it.  Sunny asks, Michael reminds us, does mobile phones and the Internet bring some kind of solidarity in the face of Chinese society?  The suggestion that new ties may be more virtual is convincing to Michael, but he also wonders what’s driving it and what the normative implications are–can you meaningfully look at ties that might in fact be almost exclusively virtual?  In the first paper, the most valued use of online community is when they are connected to the physical community; here, the question is what is the value of an almost totally virtual community. Michael thinks it’s an open question.

Michael also considers Weiyu Zhang’s paper a valuable contribution because it demonstrates the characteristics of social networking sites in a helpfully multimethod manner, and learning how ties (especially weak ties) emerge in forming social capital.  Issues remain about sampling and direction of causality, but he thinks it’s nonetheless an important contribution about implications of social action. Continue reading

2.3 Weiyu ZHANG: In search of collective action: Interest-oriented vs. relationship-oriented social network sites in China

Weiyu Zhang offers some insights about collective action based on social network sites in China. She reminds us that collective action is a difficult term to define.  She selects the definition based on Bimber, Flanagin & Sohl (2006) as “a set of communication processes involving the crossing of boundaries between private and public life.”  What do they mean as crossing, she asks us?  Expressing or acting on an individual interest in ways observable to relevant others.  Boundary crossing can incurs transaction costs–so this definition suggests that the softer the boundary, the easier it is to cross. 

Weiyu reviews some of the common problems of strong ties in social networks: homogeneity that could discourage tolerance and encourage enclaving of small groups; or impeding members’ ability to adapt to significant changes.  

She mentions Usenet as a “Web 1.0″ example of showing us of the effort to establish some weak ties with strangers and doing something together.  Putnam’s Bowling Alone documents decreasing social capital in US society, with the exception of “mass mailing list groups.” But these groups have little to no personal interaction.  She looks to Web 2.0 examples that can have both massive number of weak ties and direct or personal interaction.

This brings us to Weiyu’s main research question: How an interest-oriented social networking sites (SNS) work differently in enabling collective action as opposed to relationship-oriented SNS? Continue reading

2.2 Sunny S.K. LAM: A Proposal: The Impact of ICTs on Familial Solidarity in Translocal China

Sunny Lam thinks that ICTs can be used as a way of strengthening familial solidarity. He brings us this paper based several post-1978 economic reforms, including the “four modernizations” which led to enterprise reform and loose hukou zhidu, education system reform (1977), and China’s one-child policy (since 1979).

He wonders whether ICTs as new channels for communication can help establish what he calls a “translocal familial solidarity” between generations, especially as young family members become more socially and spatially mobile.  He also wants to know whether ICT models can tackle social tensions within this area.  He pulls from theoretical frameworks and literature on media and migration, “network of solidarity” (Castells), and translocality. We can think of “modernity as motivation,” he tells us, and “translocality mobilizes people to take social action.”

The findings, Sunny tells us, show Continue reading

2.1 HU Fan, JIANG Li, & WANG Ning: Chinese Diasporic Communities Online and Offline: The Effects of Internet Use on Offline Community Participation and Social Action

Jiang Li wants to shift our focus to what Chinese people are doing with the Internet. In her study, she argued that Chinese diaspora web site is a combination of mass media and interpersonal media. To the best of our knowledge, however, there are very few studies of the use and effects of Chinese diaspora websites; the studies that do fail to look at first-generation immigrants, who are the primary users of the web sites.

Jiang pulls us back to 1995 and Robert Putnam’s displacement theory, that media use actually leads to the decline of social capital. This approach, though, has been challenged for its narrow focus due to a number of reasons – empirical results aren’t consistent; Putnam used a simple measure of Internet use; individual differences were overlooked.

With this in mind, Jiang tells us that the research objectives of the study was to understand the motives that drive the use of Chinese diaspora websites.  The study posited that the different motives for using Chinese diaspora websites are associated with different community participations based on (1) attitudes and (2) behaviors.

Continue reading

CIRC ’09 Day 2, Panel 2: Civic Engagement and Participation

 

CIRC squareWe’re on break now, but will soon be hearing from Panel 2:  

  • HU Fan, Hong Kong Baptist University, JIANG Li, Cornell University & WANG Ning, Hong Kong Baptist University
  • Sunny S.K. LAM, The Chinese University of Hong Kong 
  • Weiyu ZHANG, National University of Singapore 
  • Respondent: Michael DELLI CARPINI, University of Pennsylvania 
  • Moderator: Peter YU, Drake University

 

Liveblogging to follow.  Once again, you can continue to watch the webcast live, among other ways of staying connected with the conference’s proceedings. Full biographies of panelists are available here.

CIRC ’09 Day 2: Women & Minorities

Women and Minorities
Naxi and the Net: “Modernization” and Digital Culture in a Minority Frame, Qian MO, Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications & David GOLUMBIA, University of Virginia
Exploring the Digital Divide Among Migrant Women in Beijing, Elisa OREGLIA, UC Berkeley
Taiwan’s Online Policy on Multiculturalism and Multiculturalism, Jens DAMM, Freie Universität Berlin
Women and Online Civic Engagement: Exploring the Gender Gap in the Use of Online Discussion, TENG Xiaoyan, Peking University
Respondent: Emily HANNUM, University of Pennsylvania
Moderator: Randy KLUVER, Texas A&M University

Elisa Oreglia has been examining the digital divide for migrant women in Beijing. She studied six women in Beijing from July to August 2007. Ms Xie (21) is from Henan, Ms Long (20) is from Shandong, and Ms Wang (23) is from Shaanxi. They work as fuwuyuan (waitresses/service). They migrate to send money home. The other three, Ms Wei (20) from Shaanxi, Ms Song (23) from Anhui and Ms Wu (24) from Shaanxi, migrated out of personal desire and are somewhat financially independent. Ms Wu worked in a massage parlor but realized the bosses took all the money, so she and her co-workers started their own massage parlor.

TV is the “old” ICT for these women. It is a synchronous social activity and space, fluid and has authority. New ICT includes mobiles and PCs. Three were on their 4th/5th mobile, though Ms Long was embarassed by her xiaolingtong. Mobiles are individual, virtual, often asynchronous, fluid, and bridge/network. Oreglia asks “but are these lasting networks?”

Only two women went to Internet cafes, which are male-dominated, dirty and not attractive. They would download music, use QQ, watch movies, but did little search. Learning how to search requires a community to teach you, and this seems to be lacking.

During the 2007-2009 longitudinal study, Song and Wu bought a laptop and stayed in touch with Wang. Oreglia hopes to continue watching how their behavior changes as they get older.
Jens Damm presents on Taiwan’s policy of multiculturalism and multiculturalism online. Damm examines how the Internet is used by different ethnic groups (Hakka, Aboriginal Peoples, Hoklo, Mainlanders, and other). He examines how new media affects collective/historical/cultural memory, comparing online and state sponsored multiculturalism, the eeffects of Web 2.0, particularly in the context of websites for Taiwan’s 4 ethnic groups.

Taiwan is 98% Han, which breaks down to 15% Hakka, 70% Hoklo and 13% Mainlander, with the remaining 2% as indigeneous Taiwanese. Multiculturalism became a major issue under President Chen Shui-bian who cast it as a form of patriotism. Multiculturalism is defined as including recognition by international law, which led to it becoming an instrument for independence movements. Chen announced multiculturalism as official policy.

Taiwan plays a major role in Asian mediascapes, such as soap operas, games and cosplay. The Taiwan Network Information Center http://www.twnic.net gives data showing 79% of households have computers, 71% internet access, 69% is broadband, and 105% have mobile phones. Young people use few blogs, but use Yahoo much as Mainlanders use QQ.

The Internet can be used by ethnic groups to explore their own “roots”. There are 4 million Hakka in Taiwan, and there are an increasing number of offline museums and administrative units related to Hakka which also have online presences. They often emphasize local historical roots, locating the Hakka within Taiwanese history and culture. Besides museum websites there are also literature sites (one mapping to geographic sites) and BBS. There are blogs about Aboriginal Peoples, usually in Chinese and not written by Aboriginals. Hoklo tend to have self-affirmative blogs, while Mainlanders are defensive.

Teng Xiaoyan looks at gender and online discussion forums. 48.5% of Internet users in China are women, but are they using forums to engage in public affairs? Are women equally represented in forums? Do they prefer different topics? Are they less agonistic? Are they more likely to dropout and stop logging in (for more than 3 months for this study)?

Teng examined Maoyan, Tianya and Sina forums from Dec. 2007 to June 2008, roughly 23,000+ reply posts by over 11,000 users. Gender information is provided by profiles, which is taken at face value since users can choose not to provide any answer to the gender question. Teng found women are highly under-represented in root posting, but more likely than men to post replies. Men tend to root post about politics, society and culture, with while women tend to post about emotional life, family life, environment, culture, and “others”, matching stereotypes. In terms of being agonistic or dissenting, women often matched men. Teng also found register rates were more important than dropout rates.

Professor Mo Qian couldn’t come, so David Golumbia is presenting alone. The Naxi bring up questions about the Internet’s ability to affect minority culture. The optimistic perspective says it could help disseminate Naxi culture, while the pessimist says globalization and cosmopolitanism could destroy it. Globalization advocates to say Naxi culture can only be viewed as “traditional” or “static”, which they argue presumes Naxi culture cannot be “modern”. Is there a way to understand them as no more or less modern than cosmopolitans? Naxi do not only use the Internet, but also describes Naxi culture from an outsider perspective for an outsider audience. Does this “museum-ize” Naxi culture?

Naxi pictographs are not a written language, but genuine pictographs. While important, these help museumize the Naxi and don’t provide a system of writing allowing Naxi to use their indigeneous language online. Moreover, introducing writing would fundamentally transform their culture. While Naxi Internet users usually speak the language at home, 13 use it at work or school, and only occasionally do they use it in email (usually using Chinese).

Asking them what is important to Naxi identity, they offered language, clothing, living habits, Dongba religion, holiday traditions or music. Clothing (or costume) was the answer from 83 participants, while music/arts was least mentioned. Clothing is a crucial way of displaying minorities to outsiders. In China particularly there are “minority parks”. With technological modernity, culture becomes costume as it formalizes identity according to rules and forms.

Emily Hannum, the respondent, points out that Golumbia’s remarks intersect with concerns about economic migration, and asks if by examining if Naxi are modern, is he using the very juxtaposition he criticizes? What about other examples of being ethnic and cosmopolitan simultaneously? How were the choices of identity offered determined and selected, and were they open ended?

Regarding the digital divide and gender, she asks about the sociopolitical background of the two types of migrants, whether there are “migrant magazines” or the use of other older media technology as in some other countries?

For multiculturalism in Taiwan, it reminded her of Dru Gladney’s work on inter-Han interaction. Are there materials related to transnational aboriginal movements in use as well? And what are the differences in terms of demographics and age compared to Korea and China, since Korea has a similar demographic profile.

For women and discussion forums, she asks about methodology. Are they getting a self-selected group of women who are “out” about being women?