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China's online censorship faces growing public pushback

The Cyberspace Administration of China also summoned executives from major platforms such as Sina Weibo, Douyin, and Kuaishou, imposing fines and demanding tighter monitoring of trending topics to ensure what it called a "clean and bright cyberspace."

December 07, 2025 / 20:16 IST
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The Cyberspace Administration of China also summoned executives from major platforms such as Sina Weibo, Douyin, and Kuaishou, imposing fines and demanding tighter monitoring of trending topics to ensure what it called a "clean and bright cyberspace." (AI Generated Image)

China's extensive digital surveillance and censorship system has begun to show signs of collapse, according to Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council (MAC).

In its latest Quarterly Report on the Situation in China, the council said that China's "digital authoritarian model" has reached a breaking point and is now caught in a self-perpetuating loop of suppression and speculation, as reported by The Taipei Times.

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According to The Taipei Times, the MAC cited the suspicious death of Chinese actor Alan Yu in Beijing on September 11 as a striking example of the growing cracks in China's online control regime. Authorities swiftly labelled Yu's death as an "accidental fall after drinking," but the explanation was widely doubted by the public.

Circulating videos, audio clips, and online rumours connecting Yu to senior Chinese Communist Party (CCP) leader Cai Qi only deepened public suspicion. In response, Chinese censors moved quickly, removing posts, deleting discussions, and forbidding further inquiries.