Chinese micro-bloggers pay cash for followers

Micro-blogging is hugely popular in China where other more traditional media such as newspapers are heavily censored
The Chinese craze for micro-blogging has reached such dizzying heights that companies are now offering to help people boost their following and stand out from the crowd -- for a price.

The Chinese craze for micro-blogging has reached such dizzying heights that companies are now offering to help people boost their following and stand out from the crowd -- for a price.

"Why use our services?" one company called Yangcheng Media asks on its website. "Who would you follow? Somebody with 2,000 followers or 20,000 followers? The answer is easy: most people have a herd mentality."

The firm offers up 100 followers for just one yuan ($0.15), in a bid to make users of China's popular Twitter-like weibo services stand out from the pack.

Micro-blogging is hugely popular in China, where other more traditional media such as newspapers are heavily censored. As with , people with huge amounts of followers achieve a much sought-after type of cyber-standing.

The number of weibo users more than tripled from January to June this year alone, reaching nearly 195 million -- roughly equal to Brazil's population -- according to the semi-official China Internet Information Center.

And this number may continue to rise. By the end of June, there were a total of 485 million Chinese online users, more than half of whom are not yet sending weibo bursts of about 150 Chinese characters each.

One company called Gaodeding -- which translates as "Yes We Can!" -- goes a step further, offering weibo addicts a package of 20 active followers for one yuan, according to a man surnamed Liu who works at the firm.

Active are people who update their accounts daily, rather than so-called "corpses" who seldom post or spread information from netizens they follow.

(c) 2011 AFP

Citation: Chinese micro-bloggers pay cash for followers (2011, August 9) retrieved 24 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2011-08-chinese-micro-bloggers-cash.html
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