Friday March 10, 2006
China Using Cartoon Cyber Cops to Warn Internet Users Police are Watching
"The main function of Jingjing and Chacha is to intimidate, not to answer questions," say security officials
By Peter J. Smith
Shenzhen, March 10, 2006 (LifeSiteNews.com) – The People’s Republic of China has invented a new and innovative way to make the totalitarian regime internet-user friendly: cartoon cyber cops. China, which has long-been concerned with the threat posed by online dissidents, has been notorious for its hard-line restrictions on the Internet. However, with “Jingjing” and “Chacha”, the cute cartoon cops, the communist country can now put some friendly faces on the ubiquitous online police force.
Chinese Police successfully introduced the novel idea to use these animated icons to patrol news and discussion websites in the Chinese city of Shenzhen. The very clever names for the animated cops come from the Chinese characters jing and cha, which means “police”. The Internet police icons have been responsible for a 60% decline in the filtering of Internet postings for content challenging the political order.
"The main function of Jingjing and Chacha is to intimidate, not to answer questions," a security official told Beijing Youth Daily.
“Now internet users know the police are watching them,” said Chen Minli, director of the Shenzhen City Public Security Bureau’s Internet Surveillance Center said in an interview with the Financial Times. She called the cartoons “a historic breakthrough,” putting the presence of the online police at the forefront in people’s minds. Chen attributes the idea of the cutesy communist cops to her teenage daughter’s mind. The idea puts a more personable face to the sophisticated government apparatus that blocks and filters thousands of websites in China.
Jingjing and Chacha move along with the user as he scrolls through local discussion websites. The process is interactive. Internet users can now easily denounce Internet crimes, or re-educate themselves about online conduct by just clicking on the icon. Jingjing and Chacha will also communicate with Internet users through the QQ instant messaging system, as virtual users to deter them from internet crime, or just to remind them in a friendly fashion that the regime’s “Big Brother” is watching them.
Chinese users can find out more about Jingjing and Chacha from their websites. There they also can listen to the music available, including the hit number, “Song of the People’s Police.”
See related previous LifeSiteNews stories:
Internet Censorship: Is It Possible? How soon? - In Depth Report
http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2005/aug/050831a.html
Control of Internet Being Taken Away From US For Questionable Reasons
http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2005/oct/05101101.html
Communist Google: Search Leader Agrees to Submit to Chinese Censors
http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2006/jan/06012503.html
Latest Headlines
- Cardinal George Denounces "New Ways Ministry" as Pseudo-Catholic Organization

- Irony: 19-Child Duggar Family Renting Former Home of Local Planned Parenthood Leader

- Document Reveals Inconsistencies in ND's Jenkins Claims on ND88

- New Country Music Star Born as Pro-Life Ballad Climbs the Charts

- Future of Pontifical Academy for Life at Stake as Members Meet in Closed Door Session

- Rally Planned in Defence of Canadian Pro-Life Ad

- Commentary on February 8 News

- Chinese Human-Rights Crusaders Nominated for Nobel Peace Prize

- U.K.’s Conservative Leader Pledges Full Support to Gay Agenda

- B.C. Civil Liberties Association Goes to Bat for Pro-Life Student Club

- Police Refuse to Release Federal "Threat Assessment" on Wis. Pro-Lifers

- Canadian Human Rights Commission Appeals Ruling against Hate Messages Statute

- Homosexual Activist Keith Norton Dies at 69

- Malta Celebrates 32nd Pro-Life Day

- My Vote for Best Pro-life Super Bowl Ad: Google’s Parisian Love Story

- Pope: Family Necessary for Child Development

- Letters to the Editor

Most Read this Week
- Veterans, Former Army Legal Chief Defend “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”
- Planned Parenthood President Lands Spot on Ford Foundation Board
- Rabbis Warn against 'Disaster' of Open Homosexuality in the Military
- Football Pros Give Support to Tim Tebow Super Bowl Ad
- Clash of the Abortion Titans: Planned Parenthood Launches 'Pro-Choice' Football Ad
- Canadian Station Pulls Pro-Life Ad – Too “Graphic”
- Hijacking the Brain — How Pornography Works
- Group Exposes Media "Fraud" at March for Life
- U.S. Sisters in Crisis after Embracing “Secular Culture”: Vatican Cardinal
- NYT: Rampant Polygamy in Gay 'Marriage' May Benefit Institution
MORE NEWS:
LifeSiteNews.com Home Page
Last 10 Days
Archives
Special Reports
Copyright © LifeSiteNews.com. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivatives License. You may republish this article or portions of it without request provided the content is not altered and it is clearly attributed to "LifeSiteNews.com". Any website publishing of complete or large portions of original LifeSiteNews articles MUST additionally include a live link to www.LifeSiteNews.com. The link is not required for excerpts. Republishing of articles on LifeSiteNews.com from other sources as noted is subject to the conditions of those sources.








Back to Top