China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Kids’ talents now second to money in online contests

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MANY CHILDREN compete in various kinds of commercial talent competitio­ns on the internet, and their parents will often use WeChat, the most popular mobile social media platform in China, to canvass votes for them. China Youth Daily comments:

An investigat­ive report by Beijing News on Monday is an eyeopener for parents who enter their children in such contests. There is a profit chain behind the booming business, which takes advantage of some parents’ eagerness to show off their children’s talents.

To tap into parents’ desire to increase the number of votes for their own children, some contest organizers, as well as the voting service providers, sell “gifts” that are counted as votes.

The competitio­ns that were designed to be decided by a popular vote among friends and family members have instead evolved into competitio­ns of wealth. Children from poorer families, who may deserve the top honor on merit, lose out to those contestant­s whose parents have deeper pockets.

More and more children’s talent competitio­ns are now designed especially to extract money from enthusiast­ic parents, even though the parents know wining such competitio­ns is meaningles­s.

The social media platform owners, the internet administra­tive and public security department­s are obliged to look into these problemati­c competitio­ns as they have drifted too far from what they were originally designed for.

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