China gives Tibetans a search engine, immediately censors the Dalai Lama

China gives Tibetans a search engine, immediately censors the Dalai Lama August 24, 2016

Dalai lama (2012) by Christopher Michel on flickr at https://www.flickr.com/photos/cmichel67/14577543881/in/photolist-odaHVt-qz66oW-7idHzb-hMGAr3-qqNQod-xZVKmK-p6M88w-qNXqci-rQg3WJ-quBnzo-acbGry-a4PZt2-2xh7h6-a8Bxqj-dxyat4-ntd1yV-bnxr35-agzk6U-nW2dLz-hUctpx-nVZYwh-odaKfx-nVYrPg-nW2e8B-wLcJHC-ofeSRM-odoXqQ-obsrgj-nW1iK6-nW2ejP-oduDF2-nVZpcZ-obqzwm-bVq8n6-nVYovw-odiEpY-nW1ivt-odksxY-4Rs5xy-oduE3z-dk27Qk-53brq4-odqP5h-odczwv-8WcU6F-nVZorF-rnF55X-a69Mfw-a2aiFy-6VWkZa
Dalai lama (2012) by Christopher Michel (flickr CC, edited)

After over 3 years of work, China has debuted its first ever Tibetan-language search engine: yongzin.com (which means “teacher” in Tibetan). The front page sports the bright blue, red, green, and yellow that are well-known to Google users, but the search results are very much a reflection of China’s, and not Google’s, priorities. According to the Wall Street Journal:

A quick image search for the Dalai Lama, for example, requires sifting through pages of results before locating any of the man that Chinese authorities have previously dubbed a “jackal in Buddhist monk’s robes.” Instead, users are offered photos of various Tibetan artifacts and images of official press briefings, as well as an image of former French President Nicolas Sarkozy adorned with the words, “Tibet is a part of China.”

An image provided by QZ.com showed that the Dalai Lama isn’t entirely absent from the website; in an image search of the Dalai Lama one image of him does show up among many others, including one of a PRC soldier and a young girl.

The idea behind the search engine is to provide something to Tibetan speakers so that they don’t have to use VPNs (Virtual Private Networks) to circumvent China’s Great Firewall – which can be an ever-moving target given changing developments in VPN detection and crack-downs by China and new methods of evasion on the parts of VPN companies. While in China last month, I found out that my usual VPN, Private Internet Access, did not fair well against China’s Firewall. So I picked up ExpressVPN for the month and had mostly great internet access (google, gmail, facebook, etc).

Tibetan speakers in China will now have this option, which might be helpful for those not searching for politically sensitive items. The downside, however, is that it may dissuade them from regularly checking in with non-Chinese / non-censored sites for news and information. Stories such as that of the nun who recently committed suicide as Chinese authorities destroyed a religious city will almost certainly be blocked.


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