This week, a report at IT Home described recent corporate initiatives in the fight to promote "positive energy" and suppress "malicious" negativity online. (As China Media Project explains, "âPositive energyâ has been an important phrase in the Xi Jinping era to refer to information controls and official messaging, both domestically and internationally. The term generally refers to the need for uplifting messages as opposed to critical or negative ones â and particularly the need for content that puts the Party and government in a positive light.") CDT has translated the IT Home reportâwhich draws heavily on the Cyberspace Administration of Chinaâs official statementsâas well as some reactions below:
October 28: Tencent Editor-in-Chief and Vice President of Public Policy Zhu Dianjun announced Tencentâs formation of a Positive Energy Algorithm Task Force at the 2025 Content Creator Carnival in Guangzhou today, Securities Times reports.
Zhu said that Tencent relies on WeChatâs unique social relationship network to enable the natural flow, based on usersâ mutual trust, of high-quality content like knowledge sharing, practical skills, and emotional resonance. Not only does this make sharing quality content into a kind of "social gifting" between users, it also systemically curbs the spread of harmful information, gradually fostering a healthy ecosystem in which "the good drives out the bad."
IT Homeâs inquiries reveal that since the start of the special "Clear and Bright: Management of Common Algorithmic Issues on Online Platforms" campaign, in response to intense public concern about the dangers of algorithmic recommendations exacerbating vulgar content, "information cocoons," and opinion polarization, the Cyberspace Administration of China has helped to oversee and guide key platforms in optimizing their recommendation algorithms and adjusting the rules by which they operate. Those key platforms have responded proactively by signing the Nanning Declaration on Algorithms for Good; improving review of algorithmically recommended content; launching dedicated pages, channels, and accounts for publicizing the principles behind algorithmic rules; developing new online functions such as "Cocoon Assessment" and "One-Click Cocoon-Buster"; optimizing services that help manage user interests and preferences; and enhancing diversity in algorithmic content recommendations.
To this end, platforms including Douyin, Xiaohongshu [RedNote], Weibo, Kuaishou, WeChat Channels, and Bilibili have systematically optimized multiple functions centered on core aspects such as weighted recommendation of positive-energy content, safeguarding usersâ freedom of choice, diversifying recommended content, and increasing algorithmic transparency.
In May of this year, WeChat Channels released âAn Infographic Guide to Understanding WeChat Channelsâ Algorithmic Recommendationsâ and the series âBreaking Out of the Algorithmic Cocoon.â To facilitate breaking through âinformation cocoons,â it launched innovative features such as âCocoon Assessmentâ and âOne-Click Cocoon Busterâ to help users guard against the risks of information cocoons. [Chinese]
Responses gathered from Weibo by CDT Chinese editors were more energetic than positive:
èźĄć äžć ïŒHahahahaha, I laughed so hard I nearly burst a hemorrhoid!
ć€ćć·«ćŒïŒWhen the algorithm detects users whose positive energy is running low, it will automatically recharge them for free.
ćŻæ1966ïŒIf everythingâs positive energy, thereâs no energy at all.
性èćććïŒThe Chinese Academy of Sciences should set up a Positive Energy Research Institute.
Beso_GrandeïŒIn future, when AI systems boot up, they wonât be allowed to connect to the negative terminal. [In an electrical circuit, current cannot flow without both a positive and a negative terminal.]
æ„怩çć°ćïŒRacing away from civilization at hypersonic speed.
Beso_GrandeïŒBoth Red and expert.
ćȘäœçȘć„ïŒCasting an inescapable dragnet of positive energy. [Chinese]
The emphasis on breaking through information cocoonsâ俥æŻè§æż xĂŹnxÄ« jiÇn fĂĄng, equivalent to "echo chamber" or "filter bubble"âmight seem ironic given Chinese authoritiesâ devotion of vast effort and resources to cocooning the whole countryâs internet. Undeterred, Beijing leveled the same accusation at Taiwanâs government in August:
A Chinese mainland spokesperson said on Wednesday that the "information cocoon" created by Taiwanâs Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) authorities is starting to crumble, as people in Taiwan become aware of the real mainland through the internet and social networking services.
Zhu Fenglian, a spokesperson for the State Council Taiwan Affairs Office, made the remarks at a press conference in response to some Taiwan media reports alleging that the mainland is using social media to "brainwash" Taiwan youth.
Zhu said that for a long time, the DPP authorities have attempted to block channels for Taiwan compatriots to learn about the mainland and mislead the public.
Thanks to internet penetration and the rapid evolution of social media, netizens on both sides of the Taiwan Strait can now access news faster, see each otherâs daily lives more easily, and engage in more diverse exchanges, she said. [Source]
Amid the exodus of "TikTok refugees" to Xiaohongshu in January, a blog post by "Pingyuan Gonzi" at the nationalist-leaning Guancha argued that "The True Information Cocoon is Actually on Foreign Websites." The piece was later translated at The China Academy, an English-language site with numerous apparent ties to Guancha and other nationalist voices:
Since Rednote is a Chinese social platform with a single database, it doesnât distinguish between domestic and international versions, and users from any part of the world can register using their phones, creating an amusing scene where Chinese and English speakers chat animatedly on the same platform. Americans exclaimedââThis is the real free world.â
[âŠ] Therefore, Chinese social software doesnât need to specifically create an âinternational versionâ for foreigners; a multilingual, unrestricted communication platform is the correct path.
[âŠ] Content-wise, the Simplified Chinese [PRC] internet hosts the most diverse, free, and inclusive content globally, almost free from âpolitical correctness.â You can openly support Russia or Ukraine, Israel or Palestine, be anti-American or pro-American, without any interference. Which Chinese website, app, or forum isnât buzzing with heated arguments day and night, presenting diverse perspectives, and robust logic to argue their correctness and criticize othersâ mistakes? Thereâs no single entity dominating the discourse; various ideologies and factions coexist fascinatingly.
Regarding resource richness, logical debate skills, and content brilliance, the Chinese internet ranks number one globally. Conversely, so-called âforeign websitesâ are real ânews bubbles.â English internet spaces are monopolized by American mainstream media, essentially regurgitating different versions of the same ideas, filled with universal value and political correctness, lacking innovation and fun. Traditional Chinese [non-PRC Sinophone] websites are saturated with outdated opinions, seemingly like a cesspool. They canât offer an engaging experience after prolonged exposure. [Source]
Chinese authorities, it swiftly turned out, did not agree that a multilingual, unrestricted communication platform was the correct path. CDT translated a range of less triumphalist Chinese perspectives on the influx, including one Weibo userâs comment: "We all know this isnât going to end well, so letâs enjoy this âglobal-village momentâ while we can."