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Australia

Australia PM Morrison Loses Control of WeChat Chinese Account as Election Looms (reuters.com) 27

A little-known Chinese technology company that took over a WeChat social media account set up for Australia's Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Monday it wanted to buy an account with a large fanbase in Australia, and was unaware it was his. From a report: Australian politicians said Morrison's office lost access to the account on the platform, owned by Chinese tech giant Tencent Holdings, several months ago. The politicians claimed the move represented censorship amid growing diplomatic tensions between Canberra and Beijing with a national election to be held in Australia by May. The account, which bore Morrison's photograph and posted information on his policies in Mandarin targeted at Australian voters of Chinese ethnic origin, had 76,000 followers.

The account was renamed 'Australia China New Life' in January by its new Chinese owner, Fuzhou 985 Technology, based in Fujian province, which notified followers the account would instead promote Chinese life in Australia. An employee from Fuzhou 985 Technology, who only gave his surname as Huang, told Reuters by telephone was not aware the account was previously connected to Morrison. He said the transfer of ownership was conducted with a Chinese male national living in Fuzhou, whose identity he declined to disclose. "We thought this account had a large fanbase, so we decided to buy it," said Huang, adding that the company was looking for an account whose target audience was the Chinese community in Australia. He declined to say how much his company had paid to take over the account.

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Australia PM Morrison Loses Control of WeChat Chinese Account as Election Looms

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  • by Ostracus ( 1354233 ) on Monday January 24, 2022 @09:44AM (#62202379) Journal

    An employee from Fuzhou 985 Technology, who only gave his surname as Huang, told Reuters by telephone was not aware the account was previously connected to Morrison.

    Like a car, all identification stripped, and serial numbers filed off.

    • Re: Car analogy. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by BytePusher ( 209961 ) on Monday January 24, 2022 @10:11AM (#62202473) Homepage
      It turns out the account wasn't even stolen. It was setup and run by an agency under a Chinese citizen's name so apparently Morrison didn't "own" it in the same way you "own" your slashdot username. Morrison had access to the account and its not clear what dynamics lead to him losing it, but I would guess he "forgot" or refused to pay more to keep it and is now claiming victim hood when it's really just the free market.
      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Seems odd because you can set up a WeChat account side of China. You just need a working phone number to receive an SMS message, the same as many Western services these days. It works world-wide.

        My guess is that he was being cheap and didn't want to pay a Mandarin speaking Australian to run the account or translate his posts, so found someone cheaper in China. That person was then approached and offered a sum of money several times the yearly income from Morrison, and decided to cash out.

        • Politicians don't normally manage their own social media presence. His social media manager was being lazy and should have gotten fired over this.
    • Of course the buyer claims they had no idea whatsoever that the numbers had been filed off. They were also shocked that gambling was occuring in their establishment, they don't know how the bag of dope got into their handbag, it's all a big misunderstanding!

  • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Monday January 24, 2022 @10:12AM (#62202479)

    Government Controlled media is bad, because it has be kind to the government in power, and be a propaganda arm for the government.
    Corporate Controlled media is bad, because it has to be kind to its source of income, often advertisers, but also political parties and special interest groups with money.
    Public media (like PBS and NPR) is sometimes a bit better, however they still have government and corporation (underwriters) help pay their bills. However there is a particular type of person who will fund these stations with their fund drive, who in general tend to be more similarly minded, so they will make sure they cover content that will interest them.
    Social Media (which has a lot of the corporate issues), is designed to have echo chambers, vs an intelligent moderated view of the actual facts.

    Now being that there is little to no repercussion for posting fake news, the old standby of reading multiple news sources to get the big picture, no longer is practical, because we have one side saying it is X and the other guys are lying, then the other side says it is Y and the other guys are lying as well. Meaning at lest one side is false, and you cannot fully trust that the other side is truthful as well. As both can be lying.

    News has became a form of entertainment. I am sorry, but we don't always need to be entertained, but given solid boring facts. We don't need debates in where one person wins or looses, but a free form of information where the complexity of the issues are explained.

  • by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Monday January 24, 2022 @10:38AM (#62202587)

    Seems like a solid reason to never use WeChat. Some Chinese company will just buy it and you can't do anything about it.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      No different to any other social media platform. There have been people who had their account given to some corporation that wanted that particular name, with little to no compensation. I can't remember the name of the YouTube channel it happened to now, one day they logged in to find it was given away and YouTube only offered a few dollars to cover the money they spent on merchandise.

      • To my knowledge other large social media companies do not sell accounts specifically for their following. The name thing I understand because they may have trademarked it which is a legal issue. Now, had the name been trademarked by the owner and some company bought it from YouTube then they would have a good chance of getting it back.

        I agree that money talks but I do not believe that US or European social media companies engage in this particular behavior.

  • by jd ( 1658 ) <imipak AT yahoo DOT com> on Monday January 24, 2022 @11:56AM (#62202877) Homepage Journal

    If it is possible to "buy an account because it has a large fanbase", and even legitimate or respectable to do so, then we have a serious problem with accountability and authorization. Those users authorized the owner at the time of signing up to send them messages, that's part of the sign-up process. Unless there is something explicit in that sign-up process that authorizes the sale of their information to others AND the bulk sending of messages by those not explicitly authorized to do so, then at best selling an active account is ethically highly dubious and, at worst, just possibly in violation of the TOS of the service provider or the EU's GDPR (the users don't get asked about the sale, so there is no transparency, right to object or disclosure of sharing data with third parties).

  • We will all soon have a China New Life.

    • by MrKaos ( 858439 )

      We will all soon have a China New Life.

      Morrison has destroyed so many of the freedoms that Australians used to have there is no real difference.

  • Politicians should only use their departments own account(s) and/or servers for communication with their voters.
    It is ludicrous a voter needs to give up his privacy and join commercial sites like Facebook, Twitter and in this case WeChat.
    • Actually no, politicians should be able to leverage modern technology to save the government reproducing it in a worse way. What is the government department that mirrors twitter? Press releases, if we had a press that was unbiased that might actually work.

C makes it easy for you to shoot yourself in the foot. C++ makes that harder, but when you do, it blows away your whole leg. -- Bjarne Stroustrup

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