China Dissent Network
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Chinese activist in UK told by X that abusive deepfakes do not breach rules
Apple Peiqing Ni targeted by account portraying her as promiscuous drug addict after posting about Tiananmen SquareA high-profile Chinese activist in the UK who was inundated with deepfake posts on X portraying her as a sexually promiscuous drug addict was told that the abuse did not breach the rules of Elon Musk’s platform. Apple Peiqing Ni, the 27-year-old founder of the UK-based China Dissent Network, had been advised by UK police to complain to the US-headquartered platform after she was...
Chinese activist in UK told by X that abusive deepfakes do not breach rules
Apple Peiqing Ni targeted by account portraying her as promiscuous drug addict after posting about Tiananmen SquareA high-profile Chinese activist in the UK who was inundated with deepfake posts on X portraying her as a sexually promiscuous drug addict was told that the abuse did not breach the rules of Elon Musk’s platform. Apple Peiqing Ni, the 27-year-old founder of the UK-based China Dissent Network, had been advised by UK police to complain to the US-headquartered platform after she was...
Chinese activist in UK told by X that abusive deepfakes do not breach rules
Apple Peiqing Ni targeted by account portraying her as promiscuous drug addict after posting about Tiananmen SquareA high-profile Chinese activist in the UK who was inundated with deepfake posts on X portraying her as a sexually promiscuous drug addict was told that the abuse did not breach the rules of Elon Musk’s platform. Apple Peiqing Ni, the 27-year-old founder of the UK-based China Dissent Network, had been advised by UK police to complain to the US-headquartered platform after she was...
From exporting spyware to surveilling activists—how democracies became the new digital authoritarians
From exporting spyware to surveilling activists—how democracies became the new digital authoritarians Sadie Harley Scientific Editor Andrew Zinin Lead Editor "Digital authoritarianism" refers to governments using technology for surveillance and censorship to repress dissent. China remains the master practitioner. There, sweeping surveillance and censorship at home is combined with cyber-espionage and disinformation, censorship and influence campaigns abroad.
As Beijing tightens grip on VPNs, internet users in China adapt
As Beijing cracks down on VPNs, internet users in China find ways around the Great Firewall Thu 4 Jun 2026 at 4:17pm Lin recently returned to China after getting her master's degree in Australia and is again using virtual private networks (VPNs) to climb over the "Great Firewall", Beijing's censorship apparatus. She first used a VPN as a high school student to "stay on top of celebrity news and events" on Instagram. When Lin returned home last year, she found that the VPN she relied on a...
Tiananmen dissident lambasts China on massacre anniversary
Tiananmen dissident lambasts China on massacre anniversary June 4, 2026Wu'er Kaixi has put on weight in the last 37 years and his greying hair no longer flops over his eyes in the style he affected as a student at Beijing Normal University in 1989, but some things have not changed. He is, for instance, still on the list of student dissidents that the Chinese government identified as the ringleaders of the Tiananmen Square protests in those heady days when democracy seemed a possibility for...
Iran briefing: Day 100 of this war ends in a way we all saw coming
Iran weekly briefing: Day 100 of this war marked by escalation between Israel and Iran Mon 8 Jun 2026 at 6:35am Hello, ABC Middle East correspondent Matthew Doran in Jerusalem here. It's now 100 days since the US and Israel launched strikes on Iran, and the regime in Tehran retaliated across the region, plunging the Middle East into chaos. Here's what you should know now: - The Israeli military says it has intercepted three waves of Iranian missiles launched at the north of the country.
Iran after 100 days of war: The triumph of survival
Iran after 100 days of war: The triumph of survival Tehran sees its ability to preserve its governing system amid a regime-change war as a clear victory. It has been 100 days since the United States and Israel attacked Iran in a coordinated campaign aimed at regime change. Since April, a tenuous ceasefire has been in place – one that has been regularly violated by exchanges of fire.