If people in the West didn't see this coming, it was because they mistook China's authoritarianism for hostility toward technology.
Today,
China
has the world’s only internet companies that can match America’s
in ambition and reach.
It
is years ahead of the United States in replacing paper money with
smartphone payments, turning tech giants into vital gatekeepers of
the consumer economy.
And
it is host to a supernova of creative expression — in short videos,
podcasts, blogs and streaming TV — that ought to dispel any notions
of Chinese culture as drearily conformist.
All
this, on a patch of cyberspace that is walled off from Facebook and
Google, policed by tens of thousands of censors and subject to strict
controls on how data is collected, stored and shared.(Business
Standard)
China’s
leaders like the internet they have created. And now, they want to
direct the nation’s talent and tech acumen toward an even loftier
end: building an innovation-driven economy, one that produces
world-leading companies.
Not
long ago, Chinese tech firms were best known for copying Silicon
Valley.
But
the flow of inspiration now runs both ways. American social media
executives look to Tencent and ByteDance for the latest tricks for
keeping users glued to their phones.
Tencent’s
WeChat app, an all-in-one hub for socializing, playing games, paying
bills, booking train tickets and more, paved the way for the
increasingly feature-stuffed chat apps made by Facebook and Apple.
Facebook recently took a page from TikTok, a Chinese service that is
a sensation among Western tweens, by releasing its own highly similar
app for creating goofy short videos.
If
people in the West didn’t see this coming, it was because they
mistook China’s authoritarianism for hostility toward technology.
But
in some ways Chinese tech firms are less fettered than American ones.
Witness the backlash against Big Data in the United States, the calls
to break up giants like Facebook and the anxiety about digital
addiction. None of those are big problems for Chinese companies.
In
China, there is pretty much only one rule, and it is simple: Don’t
undermine the state.
So
titans like Weibo and Baidu
heed censorship orders. Unwanted beliefs and ideologies are kept out.
Beyond
that, everything is fair game. Start-ups can achieve mammoth scale
with astonishing speed; they can also crash brutally. Thanks to weak
intellectual property protections, they can rip one another off with
abandon — not great for rewarding innovation, but O.K. for
consumers, who get lots of choices.
And
the money just keeps flowing in... Read
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