Ai Weiwei, China's Most Famous Twitter User, Denounces Its New Censorship Policy

01 February '12 by the editors | Source: artinfo.com

When Ai Weiwei was arrested by the Chinese government in April of 2011, the first question asked was — what will happen to his Twitter account?

The dissident Chinese artist’s social media presence, including dozens of tweets a day, was his way of connecting with local and global audiences despite the restriction of the Great Firewall. Prior to his detention, he also used it for activism, posting the names of children who fell victim to the deadly Sichuan Earthquake as part of a campaign against corrupt governmetn officials.

When Ai was released, his Twitter output started up again, and has reached its old volume. But now China's msot famous artist's online presence has crashed up against Twitter's recently announced new international censorship policy, which makes it possible for national governments to control what tweets are displayed to users in their countries. He has not wasted time denouncing the policy.

“If Twitter censors, I’ll stop tweeting,” the artist tweeted on January 26.

Twitter couches the decision in softer terms. “We give ourselves the ability to reactively withhold content from users in a specific country — while keeping it available in the rest of the world,” the company wrote in a blog post. “We have also built in a way to communicate transparently to users when content is withheld, and why.”

Twitter now has the ability to work with local governments and local laws on a country-by-country basis to decide what tweets are displayed to users. This does not mean that a single tweet could be excised from the global network as a whole, only that users in the targeted country won’t be able to see it in their stream. Twitter states that they will be transparent about the censorship, publishing a placeholder instead of the offending tweet with a link to “learn more” about why it was excised.

The strategy of compliance will help Twitter expand in countries where there are “different ideas about the contours of self-expression,” the company wrote euphemistically. But this new policy may also damage Twitter’s reputation as a proponent of social-media-enabled activism — the site was seen as instrumental to the uprisings of the Arab Spring and the Occupy movement. It marks, in the Financial Times words, a “more pragmatic phase in the company’s evolution.”


Read entire article...


More news

SOTHEBY’S have posted $4.9bn in worldwide sales for 2011, marginally up on 2010.
01 February '12
www.antiquestradegazette.com


The online VIP Art Fair is returning for its second cyber outing. The fair, whose initials stand for “viewing in private,” invites visitors to browse the virtual booths of about 130 exhibitors from 36 countries, Feb. 3 through Feb. 8.
01 February '12
www.bloomberg.com


Christie’s International (CHRS) said there was a surge in demand for contemporary art as an investment, after its sales climbed 9 percent in 2011.
01 February '12
www.bloomberg.com


A copy of the Mona Lisa has been discovered in the Prado which was painted in Leonardo’s studio—created side by side with the original that now hangs in the Louvre. This sensational find will transform our understanding of the world’s most famous picture.
01 February '12
theartnewspaper.com


Pablo Picasso is the artist who has more works stolen than anyone else. The Spanish master has 1,147 paintings registered as nicked, missing or disputed – twice as many as the next on the Art Loss Register.
30 January '12
www.mirror.co.uk


The No. 1 question from visitors to the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, according to Emilie Gordenker, is “Where is ‘Girl With a Pearl Earring’?”
30 January '12
www.nytimes.com


Seven artists from around the world have been shortlisted for the UK's largest visual arts prize.
29 January '12
www.bbc.co.uk


The Winter Antiques Show finished its first week with strong sales and interest among buyers, including established collectors, design professionals and first-time buyers.
29 January '12
www.artdaily.org


A beautiful watercolour of Kirkby Lonsdale Churchyard by Joseph Mallord William Turner RA (1775-1851), that had not been seen at auction since 1884, sold yesterday (Wednesday 25th January 2012) for £217,250 as part of the 19th Century Paintings sale at Bonhams, 101 New Bond Street, London. The sale total was £1,871,925.
29 January '12
www.artdaily.org


In a remarkable coincidence, the ‘naturally divine’ Cumbrian view depicted in one of Turner’s paintings is up for sale at the same time as the masterpiece itself.
26 January '12
www.telegraph.co.uk


The developer of an ambitious cultural district in Abu Dhabi on Wednesday outlined a new timetable for the stalled project, with its first attraction — a branch of the Louvre — now slated to open in 2015.
26 January '12
www.artdaily.org


London Art Fair today reports a record attendance for the 24th edition of the UK’s largest and longest running fair for contemporary and Modern British art.
26 January '12
www.artdaily.org


A Frans Hals formerly owned by Elizabeth Taylor fetched $2.1 million at Christie’s Old Masters sale in New York.
26 January '12
www.bloomberg.com


Can Leonardo da Vinci's star power translate to the big screen?
25 January '12
www.artinfo.com


VIP2.0, the second outing of the online-only VIP Art Fair, will open to the public on February 3 at 8 a.m. on the dot.
25 January '12
www.artinfo.com


From 28 January through 22 April 2012, the Cobra Museum will present Klee and Cobra: A Child's Play.
25 January '12
www.artdaily.org


The Saatchi Gallery cheekily sent out a press release on Thursday that proclaims the gallery is Britain’s Most “Liked” Museum.
23 January '12
www.theartnewspaper.com


This is a prime opportunity for art recovery experts to retrieve works.
23 January '12
www.theartnewspaper.com


Featured dealer
Follow ArtListings
Search dealers
Fill in name


New on ArtListings
Art & Antiques Fairs
Museum exhibitions
Videos
Follow ArtListings