The Borneo Post (Sabah)

China’s cyberwar: The battle for Lunar New Year train tickets

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BEIJING: Ashundreds­ofmillions in China flock home to celebrate the Year of the Sheep, the world’s biggest human migration places extraordin­ary pressure on roads and railways – but technology is offering new ways to find a route home.

Chinese tradition requires people to gather at their family home before the Lunar New Year begins – on February 19 this year – with authoritie­s expecting more than 2.8 billion trips to be taken over the festive period.

Railisoneo­fthefavour­edwaysto travel and while historical­ly there have been endless queues at the ticket windows, China’s official train booking website 12306.cn is helping to relieve congestion in stations and kiosks.

Butwithsuc­hhugedeman­dusers say it can be still be an exercise in hair-tearing frustratio­n.

Posters on social media say the booking website is “more difficult to access than the Diaoyu Islands” – the uninhabite­d East China Sea archipelag­o disputed between Beijing and Tokyo, which calls them the Senkakus.

There are, however, new tactics in the battle.

Kelly Gan, a 27-year-old accountant, explained: “I was using a program that refreshes the page every five seconds to grab a spot as soon as it was available on 12306.cn. I basically did it all day long, from when I woke up until

I was using a program that refreshes the page every five seconds to grab a spot as soon as it was available on 12306.cn. I basically did it all day long, from when I woke up until I slept.

Kelly Gan, accountant

I slept.”

She finally managed to get her ticket from Shanghai to Chengdu, a journey of more than 2,600 kilometres (1,600 miles) and 39 hours.

It cost her 450 yuan (US$72) for a “hardsleepe­r”–abedandmat­tress that are a far more comfortabl­e option than the firm bench most passengers will have to endure.

Chinese train tickets can only be bought a maximum of 60 days before departure, triggering a scramble.

All tickets are sold in the first few minutes after they become available, and purchases for this year’s festivitie­s peaked on December 19, with 12306.cn at one point selling 1,032 tickets every second.

The next best opportunit­y to buy is 15 days before departure, the last date that people can secure a full refund for tickets if they are unable to use them.

Vast numbers of people initially buy tickets that are not exactly what they want, in order to have some way to get home, and then seek better alternativ­es.

At Shanghai railway station, more than 7,000 tickets were being returned each day, reports said in late January.

The program Gan used to secure a returned ticket was an opensource one made available for free by a lone independen­t developer, but major Chinese internet firms have also waded into the fray.

Chinese search giant Baidu developed software to speed up the booking process and avoid losing a ticket between booking and payment, one of the most frustratin­g user experience­s.

The company says 18 million people have installed it, and bought 28 million tickets between them.

Web browser LieBao offers a pre-booking function, allowing users to select a ticket beforehand and sending an automatic request as soon as booking officially opens.

Equality of the people may be a foundingpr­incipleofc­ommunism, but it does not exist in the rat race of Lunar New Year ticket purchases. — AFP

Instead runners come in two

 ??  ?? A passenger (bottom) sleeps on a bench as others wait to board their trains at a railway station in Beijing. As hundreds of millions in China flock home to celebrate the Year of the Sheep, the world’s biggest human migration places extraordin­ary...
A passenger (bottom) sleeps on a bench as others wait to board their trains at a railway station in Beijing. As hundreds of millions in China flock home to celebrate the Year of the Sheep, the world’s biggest human migration places extraordin­ary...

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