Bo Shide spends all day and many nights on the internet. But he is not the average Chinese “netizen”. This young Beijing policeman is a member of the municipal force’s microblogging team.
Around the clock, at least one and at most four officers read and write on Sina Weibo, a Chinese substitute for Twitter, under the tag “Ping’an [Safe or Peaceful] Beijing”.
China’s tweeting cops are part of a vast project: making the voice of the government heard in the online cacophony that has become the country’s most important public sphere.
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