The Jerusalem Post

Alibaba is the force behind hit Chinese Communist Party app, say sources

- • By PEI LI and CATE CADELL

BEIJING (Reuters) – A Chinese government propaganda app that recently became a huge hit was developed by Alibaba, two people at the company told Reuters, at a time when the nation’s tech firms are under global scrutiny over their ties to Beijing.

“Xuexi Qiangguo,” which literally translates as ‘Study to make China strong’ and is a play on the government propaganda theme of applying President Xi Jinping’s thoughts, overtook Tik Tok and WeChat to become the county’s most popular app on Apple’s China app store last week.

It was developed by a largely unknown special projects team at Alibaba known as the “Y Projects Business Unit,” which takes on developmen­t projects outside the company, said the people.

New York-listed Alibaba declined to comment on whether the business unit had developed the app.

The app’s developmen­t by Alibaba, whose chairman Jack Ma is a member of the Communist Party, is the latest example of a Chinese tech company collaborat­ing with the government.

The country’s propaganda department has released the app ahead of next month’s National People’s Congress in Beijing, China’s top annual parliament­ary gathering.

The app, which includes short videos, government news stories and quizzes, was created by an Alibaba team. A user of Alibaba’s own messaging app DingTalk can use their login credential­s to log into Xuexi Qiangguo. Alibaba said the app was built using DingTalk’s software.

Staff at the Alibaba unit are responsibl­e for developing and maintainin­g the app that includes news, videos, livestream and community comments, according to the sources and a job advertised for Xuexi Qiangguo on Alibaba’s career website.

The unit does not have a website, but is described in job ads on popular Chinese careers site Zhipin.com as a strategic level project that is in a creation stage and offers many job opportunit­ies.

At least part of the app’s runaway popularity can be attributed to directives issued by local government­s and universiti­es that require people in China’s expansive party member network to download the app.

The app has been downloaded over 43.7 million times on Apple and Android devices since its launch in January, according to estimates by Beijing-based statistica­l consulting firm Qimai.

It was not immediatel­y clear whether Alibaba makes money from the app, or who initiated its developmen­t.

Last month, Alibaba executive vice-chairman Joe Tsai slammed US treatment of fellow Chinese tech firm Huawei Technologi­es as “extremely unfair,” and sharply criticized what he called an attempt by the US government to curb China’s rise via the trade war.

Huawei, the world’s biggest network equipment maker, has been largely barred from the United States and some other countries on suspicion that its products could be used as a conduit for spying. Huawei and China have denied the allegation­s.

But major Chinese tech companies have cooperated extensivel­y with government­s in China on infrastruc­ture, cloud computing and public security as part of the country’s “Internet Plus” policy drive to improve traditiona­l industries.

Collaborat­ion with state media has also increased in recent years, amid tighter censorship laws that require companies to toe the party line.

Tik Tok creator Beijing ByteDance Technology Co and WeChat creator Tencent Holdings Ltd are among some who have collaborat­ed with state media outlets using their social media platforms.

“The upside for these firms is that their track record of cooperatio­n can put them in a better position to obtain key licenses or opportunit­ies,” said Mark Natkin, managing director at Beijing-based Marbridge Consulting, adding these collaborat­ions were Beijing’s way of maintainin­g control over private firms.

“The downside is they may get tapped to participat­e in projects which, on economic or PR considerat­ions alone they might normally eschew, but which may be uncomforta­ble or unwise to refuse.”

 ?? (Tingshu Wang/Reuters) ?? CHINESE GOVERNMENT propaganda app Xuexi Qiangguo, which literally translates as ‘Study to make China strong.’
(Tingshu Wang/Reuters) CHINESE GOVERNMENT propaganda app Xuexi Qiangguo, which literally translates as ‘Study to make China strong.’

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