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  Chinese blogs ready to rumble amid expectations   (CRI)  Updated: 2005-12-01 10:17  
 On November 21, the winners of the Deutsche Welle International Weblog Awards 
(also known as the BOBs or Best of the Blogs) were unveiled, with both jury and 
audience awards for Best Podcasting Site going to the Chinese site Antiwave by 
Pingke and Flyfig. 
 
 
 
 
   Chinese mainland 
 Internet veteran Fang Xingdong [baidu] |   Massage 
Cream by Wang Xiaofeng, a journalist from the magazine Sanlian Life Weekly, was 
chosen by the jury as Best Journalistic Blog in Chinese, while Feidao Cepan 
Qianfan Guo by Xiao Feidao scooped the audience prize. 
The jury's Best Weblog went to A Little Respect, I'm Your Mother by 
Argentinean journalist Hern��n Casciari, while the audience's was given to the 
Brazilian site Tupiniquim. 
 The annual awards, run by German website DW-World.de, are in their second 
year and involved 2,500 bloggers and podcasters, with about 100,000 internet 
users casting their votes. Last year's jury-selected Best Weblog was also a 
Chinese site called The Dog Newspaper. 
 The same day the latest results were announced, Fang Xingdong, president of 
China's first blog site Bokee.com, told China.org.cn he believed that, after an 
initial explosion in popularity in recent years, blogging in China had an even 
brighter future. 
 Fang first translated "blog" into Chinese as boke based on its pronunciation, 
but this also means "knowledgeable man." Other terms that have been used in 
Chinese include Tribe, Wangzhi (literally "web log") or simply the English 
"Blog." 
 In July 2002, Fang found that articles he had written critical of Microsoft 
had been removed from several websites, including the portal Sina.com, which he 
said had been due to commercial pressure. 
 This experience had left him disillusioned with the Internet, but he said a 
friend then introduced him to blogging, which at that time wasn't popular 
anywhere. His interest was rekindled and he became convinced that blogs would 
revolutionize cyberspace. 
 He soon established his still-dominant blog site, initially called 
Blogchina.com but renamed recently, and wrote a long Declaration of Chinese 
Bloggers to advocate the medium. 
 Yet even by late 2004 Chen Tong, vice president of Sina.com, told a blog 
seminar he still couldn't tell the difference between blogs and BBS (bulletin 
board systems). 
 Fang said thousands of Internet users are creating their own spaces every 
day, and Chinese blogs may number 10 million by the end of this year. "We can 
think of blogs as Personal Websites version 2.0. Every personal website before 
was a separate place, but blogs gather people together by using links, quotes, 
comments and RSS." 
 In September, Bokee.com received US$10 million from three American venture 
capitalists, Hong Kong-based Softbank Investment International and a mainland 
investor, while Amazon.com subsidiary Alexa currently ranks it 102 in the world 
in terms of traffic. 
 Sina.com, Sohu.com and Bokee.com each launched their own blog competitions in 
September, with Sina.com even convincing movie, music, media and literary 
celebrities to start blogs in order to promote it -- something that has proved 
extremely popular. 
 Despite large numbers of bloggers in China, Fang said "only 2 out of 5 users 
update their blogs regularly" and welcomed ways to encourage more activity. 
 Wang Yi, from BBS site Chinabbs, was quoted in Sanlian Life Weekly's November 
14 issue as saying no one really knows how many bloggers there are in China: 
"It's really hard to find out because there are too many small hosts." 
 The magazine described a debate at the Chinese Weblog Convention in Shanghai, 
which closed on November 5, over how to maintain or improve the quality of 
blogging. While some thought blogging was about people freely expressing 
themselves in their own space, others said the emphasis should be on 
professionals writing on serious subjects. 
 Fang said blogs could improve people's lives through better information 
sharing, though most bloggers in China only write about their personal feelings 
and life. 
 But this could change: a 50-year-old blogger broke the news of a fatal attack 
on a woman on Beijing's Wangfujing Road on November 7 last year and many papers 
including Beijing Youth Daily followed his reports for their coverage, with even 
CNN using it. 
 Chen Tong expressed doubts that blogs would become a significant media player 
in China. "Blogs are just a place for writing lovers to write, I can't imagine a 
day when people don't look for information from Xinhua News Agency or other 
providers," he told Qian Jiang Evening News on November 15. 
 Fang maintained that blogs would surpass traditional websites this year, and 
that their varying adaptations -- including podcasting and mobile blogs -- would 
guarantee their success. 
 He said the only difference between Chinese and overseas blogs at the moment 
was in numbers, as 60 percent of young Americans and 90 percent of young South 
Koreans write blogs, compared to less than 10 percent of young Chinese. 
 Fang said his ultimate goal was for every Chinese person to write a blog and 
express themselves online -- as well as to make Bokee.com profitable by the end 
of this year and listed on NASDAQ by the end of 2006. 
 
   
  
  
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