Description |
1 online resource (51 pages) : color illustrations, color photographs |
Series |
Policy brief / Australian Strategic Policy Institute, 2209-9689 ; report no. 54/2001 |
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Policy brief (Australian Strategic Policy Institute) ; report no. 54/2001 2209-9689
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Summary |
This report analyses two Chinese state-linked networks seeking to influence discourse about Xinjiang across platforms including Twitter and YouTube. This activity targeted the Chinese-speaking diaspora as well as international audiences, sharing content in a variety of languages. In the datasets we examined, inauthentic and potentially automated accounts using a variety of image and video content shared content aimed at rebutting the evidence of human rights violations against the Uyghur population. Likewise, content was shared using fake Uyghur accounts and other shell accounts promoting video 'testimonials' from Uyghurs talking about their happy lives in China |
Notes |
"First published December 2021." |
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Online resource; title from PDF cover page (ASPI, viewed December 5, 2021) |
SUBJECT |
Twitter -- Political aspects
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YouTube (Electronic resource) -- Political aspects
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Twitter fast |
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YouTube (Electronic resource) fast |
Subject |
Disinformation -- China
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Uighur (Turkic people) -- China
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Human rights -- Political aspects -- China
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Disinformation
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Human rights -- Political aspects
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Uighur (Turkic people)
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China
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Bogle, Ariel, author
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Zhang, Albert, author
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Wallis, Jacob, author
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Australian Strategic Policy Institute, publisher.
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