The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Fake accounts: China faces social media crackdown

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BEIJING: There are roughly 337 million users on Weibo, the popular Chinese entertainm­entoriente­d social-media platform.

Roughly one-third of those followers have shared or liked Wait Wait Wait, the new music video from teen pop idol Cai Xukun, since it debuted in January. That is a remarkable number, given how fractious China’s social-media universe can be. It’s also almost certainly bogus.

As a recent documentar­y from China’s state-owned CCTV network suggested, the groundswel­l of popularity for Cai’s video was inflated by agencies buying support from fake social-media accounts.

While such accounts pose a problem all over the world, they’re thought to total as much as 40 per cent of all active users in China. The profusion is warping Chinese ecommerce and entertainm­ent, not to mention eroding trust among consumers.

It’s true that Chinese socialmedi­a crackdowns have a sorry history. A campaign against fake social-media accounts, however, is one China’s internet users and businesses should really get behind.

The fake-follower problem has grown out of the unique role of social media in China. Elsewhere, platforms such as Facebook and Twitter are generally seen as places to exchange informatio­n. Efforts to market products or personalit­ies are tolerated at best, and mocked as irritants at worst.

In China, commerce has been far more closely integrated into social media for nearly a decade now.

That is in part due to China’s rapid adoption of mobilepaym­ent systems such as WeChat Pay, developed by Tencent Holdings Ltd, owner of the ubiquitous WeChat socialnetw­orking app.

These days, a user need only load money into an Alipay.com account, owned and developed by Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, to seamlessly buy, sell and receive tips within Weibo, which is also partly owned by Alibaba. Social e-commerce can and will develop further outside China. It’s particular­ly potent there, however, because of a history of health, safety and authentici­ty scandals; trust in brands, retailers and other people is remarkably fragile.

Shoppers thus prefer to have someone they know – or think they know, like a favourite pop singer – recommend or sell products to them.

According to a 2017 survey, up to 70 per cent of Chinese consumers born after 1995 are open to buying products on social media, compared to 44 per cent of consumers elsewhere.

Data presented at a recent Chinese government-sponsored internet conference predicted that full-year social e-commerce sales would reach US$170 billion in 2018 and account for around onethird of China’s world-beating e-commerce sales by 2020.

Companies that want a piece of this business cannot just rely on reaching consumers using banner ads. Instead, they’re tapping into a US$17 billion Chinese “influencer” industry. In its most basic form, someone with something to sell hires an influencer to post about it on social media.

Fees are based upon follower size and the ability of a celebrity to boost engagement and sales. A major star with a large following can earn nearly US$150,000 for a single promotiona­l post to her tens of millions of followers; a hobbyist with a devoted-butniche following can earn in the hundreds of dollars. Inevitably, the premium on being viewed as a person or product with an audience has given rise to businesses that sell followers.

They advertise and sell their services on the most popular e-commerce platforms, including Alibaba’s Taobao. Pricing is competitiv­e, constantly falling and currently around US$0.003 per account.

And fake followers are just the start. As CCTV documented, many of the agencies that buy and deploy bogus accounts also sell the services of low-paid humans employed to spend their days liking and forwarding content.

Among their clients are some of the 178,000 Chinese government­linked social-media accounts (in December, they were ordered to stop buying followers).

The popularity for Cai’s video was inflated by agencies buying support from fake social-media accounts.

This problem not only raises the costs of marketing in China, it undermines the credibilit­y of China’s legitimate influencer­s and their agencies.

 ??  ?? The groundswel­l of popularity for teen pop idol Cai Xukun’s new music video was inflated by agencies buying support from fake social-media accounts.
The groundswel­l of popularity for teen pop idol Cai Xukun’s new music video was inflated by agencies buying support from fake social-media accounts.

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