Technology

Twitter, Blocked In China, Takes Ad Dollars From State Run Chinese Media

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Twitter is promoting tweets from China’s largest state news agency that depict pro-democracy demonstrations in Hong Kong as violent.

The social media company is promoting the tweets even though Twitter is officially banned from China. Facebook, Instagram, Google, YouTube, Tumblr and Snapchat are also prohibited from doing business in the communist country.

Pinboard, the bookmarking service entrepreneur and social critic Maciej Ceglowski founded, first reported on the promoted tweets in a series of Twitter posts Monday morning.

“Two months on, the escalating violence in Hong Kong has taken a heavy toll on the social order,” China Xinhua News said in one tweet. “All walks of life in Hong Kong called for a brake to be put on the blatant violence and for order to be restored.”

Pinboard pointed to another promoted tweet that said: “‘China is our home, our motherland.’ Hong Kong citizens called for stopping violence, ending chaos and restoring order in the city.” China Xinhua News’s barrage of tweets comes amid protests Sunday where an estimated 1.7 million people marched through the streets of Hong Kong.

Demonstrations began in March to protest a now-suspended extradition bill — citizens are demanding the release of imprisoned protesters, inquiries into police conduct, the resignation of current Chief Executive of Hong Kong Carrie Lam and other reforms.

Thousands of protesters forced Hong Kong International Airport to cancel hundreds of flights on Aug. 12 and 13 to express their anger over the way police responded to Aug. 11 protests by using excessive force and teargas in an enclosed subway station in Kwai Fong and in the shopping district of Tsim Sha Tsui.

Twitter suspended several Chinese-language user accounts in June days before the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre, including those belonging to critics of China’s government. The company said the accounts were removed by error and, despite speculation, “were not mass reported by the Chinese authorities.”

The company has not yet responded to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment about the promoted tweets.

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