San Francisco Chronicle

China’s own Wikipedia, sans public editing

- By Louise Watt

BEIJING — China is compiling a free online encycloped­ia to rival Wikipedia, but it will likely give only Beijing’s official version of sensitive historical events, and the public won’t be able to write or edit it.

Instead, scholars and experts hand-picked by Beijing say only they will be able to make entries — the latest example of the Chinese government’s efforts to control informatio­n available on the Internet.

The scholars say truth is their guiding light, and their editing and review process is a rigorous one. If there is a difference of opinion, a committee should figure it out, said Zhang Baichun, chief editor of the history of science and technology section.

“Of course, science does not come from democratic votes, to convince others you will have to present the most convincing proof,” he said.

The effort to compile 300,000 entries that span science, literature, politics and history is being led by the ruling Communist Party’s central propaganda department, which guides public opinion through instructio­ns to China’s media, Internet companies and publishing industry as well as overseeing the education sector. They have instructed the Encycloped­ia of China Pub-

“If it’s not blocked in China, the publisher must accept censorship, either self-censorship or censored by authoritie­s.” Qiao Mu, an independen­t media analyst in Beijing

lishing House, known for its offline Chinese Encycloped­ia, to produce it.

The ruling party has struggled to manage public opinion in the Internet age, when citizens can comment on news and topics of outrage and post photos of protests on social media — at least until such messages are scrubbed away or rendered unsearchab­le by censors. China also regularly blocks overseas sites including Facebook and Twitter, and has periodical­ly blocked Wikipedia’s English and Chinese versions. Currently, the Chinese Wikipedia is inaccessib­le in the mainland.

Jiang Lijun, senior editor at the Encycloped­ia of China Publishing House, said they plan to have entries on political leaders, the history of the Communist Party, and subjects including virtual reality, artificial intelligen­ce and the European Union.

The online Chinese Encycloped­ia will focus primarily on entries that are less likely to change as opposed to recent events, and with academic value, “while also trying to strike a balance between that, being timely and what people are searching for,” she said. She declined to comment on how events that are politicall­y sensitive in China, like the Cultural Revolution and the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown, would be treated.

Qiao Mu, an independen­t media analyst in Beijing, said the Chinese Encycloped­ia would be “quite different” from Wikipedia because of the need to toe the line on political taboos.

“If it’s not blocked in China, the publisher must accept censorship, either self-censorship or censored by authoritie­s,” he said.

He said the encycloped­ia would likely present a single, official version of sensitive historical events, and exclude items like the Tiananmen crackdown and the outlawed Falun Gong spiritual group, which “never exist on the Internet.”

The publishing house behind the Chinese Encycloped­ia is paying 20,000 scholars and experts from universiti­es and research institutes to write entries and it is slated to go online next year. Jiang said initially the encycloped­ia will just be in Chinese, but they are also doing research to see how viable an English version would be.

Jiang said they met with a team from San Francisco’s Wikipedia to learn from their experience.

Wikipedia is edited and maintained by hundreds of thousands of volunteers around the world, and has more than 40 million articles encompassi­ng nearly 300 languages. More than 900,000 entries are in Chinese, compared with more than 5 million in English.

“There is Chinese content on Wikipedia too, but sometimes it is not as accurate as it could be,” said Jiang.

Jiang said that as Wikipedia’s content is generated by users, they can create more entries faster. “But we try to eliminate self-promotion and inaccuracy as much as possible.”

Zhang, the professor of history of science and technology, said the online version will make it easier to reach more people, particular­ly young readers.

To create the history of science and technology entries, Zhang said professors from the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Natural Sciences first hold meetings with veterans and young experts in their fields to form a committee. The committee will then find the most authoritat­ive person on the topic to write the draft, including sometimes foreign experts, said Zhang, who is director of the institute.

The draft is reviewed by a section chief editor and then the committee.

“If there is a difference of opinion, all deputy and chief editors should participat­e in the discussion and figure it out together,” Zhang said. “We will reason things out with the author until we reach an agreement, or change the author.”

 ?? Andy Wong / Associated Press ?? A Chinese man walks by a cabinets displaying Chinese encycloped­ias at a book store in Beijing.
Andy Wong / Associated Press A Chinese man walks by a cabinets displaying Chinese encycloped­ias at a book store in Beijing.

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