Study finds that anger spreads further than joy on social networks

Study finds that anger spreads further than joy on social networks

Want to get your message heard on a social network? Try raging about it. China’s Beihang University has published a study of Sina Weibo users which suggests that anger-fueled online posts have more of an influence than those reflecting other emotions. During the research period, a typical bitter comment would affect posts three degrees removed from the original; joy had a muted impact, while disgust and sadness hardly got any traction. Don’t be too quick to lament the human condition, though. As researchers note, many of the angry posts were triggered by politics in Weibo’s native China. There’s a chance that internet denizens on other social networks have a rosier outlook on life.

[Image credit: Wayne Marshall, Flickr]

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Via: MIT Technology Review

Source: Cornell University Library

Verizon Lumia 1520 variant leaked in China, teases 20MP PureView camera and Zeiss lens

Verizon branded Lumia 1520 variant leaked in China, teases 20megapixel PureView camera and Zeiss lens

An oversized smartphone with Zeiss optics and PureView camera technology? We wouldn’t expect anything less from Nokia, but it’s nice to see the rumors roll in, all the same. Noted Weibo leaker Houdabao has managed to get his hands on a large Lumia device with a PureView 20-megapixel camera, Zeiss optics and Verizon branding. The post describes the devices as a “big big Windows Phone,” which sounds an awful lot like the rumored Lumia 1520. The speakers and camera flash are in slightly different locations than the leaked image we saw earlier this month, but we’re willing to chalk that up to carrier variations. Nokia hasn’t said anything official just yet, but rumors suggest that the device will be officially unveiled later this month.

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Via: WPCentral

Source: Weibo

Tencent ups the ante, offers users 10TB of free cloud storage in promotion

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If you thought that the free storage that’s offered by Microsoft, Google and others were generous, then you’ve never been to China. Tencent, in an attempt to crawl past local rivals Baidu and Weibo, is offering customers a whopping 10 Terabytes of space on its Weiyun cloud storage service. All users need to do is sign up with the company, offer up their QQ account number, and download the Weiyun mobile app — which bags ’em an instant 1TB, with the allowance gradually increasing to 10TB the more files they upload. The only downside for us, naturally, is that the promotion does make SkyDrive’s 25GB seem a bit stingy by comparison.

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Via: TNW

Source: Tencent (Translated)

Hell freezes over: Sina Weibo now lets you post to Facebook

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For some strange reason, Sina Weibo’s always required folks to log in to view some of its posts, but now there’s more incentive for those who’ve yet to open a Weibo account. Announced yesterday, the website claims to be the first Chinese social networking platform to connect with Facebook — the irony being the latter is still banned in China, plus Tencent’s WeChat already beat Weibo on this one.

Anyhow, both new and existing overseas users (including those from Taiwan and Hong Kong) can now register their Facebook accounts on Weibo, thus letting them post Weibo messages to the former simultaneously. Understandably, it doesn’t work the other way round, but this should still somewhat help Weibo expand its user base of over 530 million.

As you can see in the above screenshots, this author took the new feature for a test drive and could only forward text-only Weibo posts to Facebook. That said, Sina’s press release states that through Facebook’s Graph API, Weibo users will eventually be able to also share images, videos, TV shows, music and mobile location to Zuckerberg World. For now, this Facebook integration is only available on the web client, but the Android and iOS clients will soon receive it as well. We’ve reached out to Sina to see what’s up with the Windows Phone version, so stay tuned.

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Via: The Next Web, Engadget Chinese

Source: Sina Digital (Chinese)

How China Censors Its Twitter at Light Speed

Twitter is a great place to say stupid shit. Worst case scenario is that you look like an idiot. In China, things are a bit different; thousands of censors trawl the nation’s Twitter-clone Weibo, quashing pesky dissent with lightning reflexes. And though China doesn’t share its methods, computer scientists have been able to figure out just how the wildly efficient the process must be. More »

ZTE’s Nubia Z5 turns to face the camera in ‘leaked’ photo

ZTE's Nubia Z5 turns to face the camera in 'leaked' photo

We already got a look at the rear of the latest China-bound smartphone from ZTE, but now the Nubia Z5 has turned around to shown us its face. The image was apparently “leaked” on Chinese social network Weibo by the an enthusiastic PR manager at the firm. Things are still pretty sparse on the specification front, but — all things going according to plan — that 5-inch screen and italian design will be hiding quad-core internals and at least 13 megapixels of camera power. With the official reveal tipped for next week, though, it shouldn’t be too long until we’re seeing a whole lot more of it. Leaked or otherwise.

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Via: Techkiddy

Source: Weibo

Sina Weibo exceeds 400 million users, sees increasing mobile traffic

Sina Weibo exceeds 400 million users, sees increasing mobile traffic

Microblogging site Sina Weibo, China‘s answer to Twitter, reported a pretty dazzling statistic in its third quarter results: it now boasts over 400 million registered users. We can’t be sure how many are active, of course, but it’s still a vast number considering appeal is localized to the People’s Republic. It also means Sina is winning the popularity contest with social media competitor Tencent, although it humbly acknowledges their services are somewhat different. The company’s platform is still evolving, and it’s only recently seen mobile usage exceed computers, so is shifting product focus accordingly. Sina’s obviously doing something right, and that suits us just fine — keep those news bites and juicy leaks coming.

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Sina Weibo exceeds 400 million users, sees increasing mobile traffic originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 16 Nov 2012 14:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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China Mobile announces Nokia Lumia 920T, changes its mind soon afterward

China Mobile announces Nokia Lumia 920T, changes its mind soon afterward

Let’s face it, China Mobile will carry Nokia’s Lumia 920T, with the launch now believed to be in mid-November. Unfortunately, the network itself isn’t being so straight forward, announcing the news on Sina Weibo shortly before yanking the post altogether. China Mobile’s dithering aside, we’re fairly sure the 920T will gain TD-SCDMA and TD-LTE modems, but is otherwise the same phone we’ve pawed at for the last few weeks.

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China Mobile announces Nokia Lumia 920T, changes its mind soon afterward originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Oct 2012 05:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink WP Central, Winhp (Translated)  |  sourceChina Mobile (Sina Weibo) (Pulled)  | Email this | Comments

Tencent reveals how it gets users to pay for its service

Tencent reveals how it gets users to pay for its service

We’ve all seen those “OMG! Don’t make us pay for Facebook” fake petitions, but App.net and The Social Network raise questions about how our social services raise their moolah. Tencent’s Sophia Ong has revealed that it’s in the unique position of having users happy to pay for services that we take for granted. While signups for QZone (Facebook equivalent) is free, users have to use QBs, the site’s virtual currency, to buy and clothe their avatars. While 1 QB = 1 yuan ($0.16), there are 30 million paying customers on the site — meaning that the company can count on around $50 million in monthly payments. It’s not stopping there either, sensing a slowdown in the local economy, the company has an eye on opening up its eCommerce platform to ensure it can continue to rake in the cash.

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Tencent reveals how it gets users to pay for its service originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 14 Aug 2012 09:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony Xperia P blushes in metallic pink

Sony Xperia P blushes in metallic pink

If the black, grey and red hues of existing Xperia P models really weren’t cutting it, Sony has just previewed a new color option — pink. The device made a brief appearance at Sony’s Weibo event, matching the metallic finish of our review model, but throwing in a little extra feminine charm. No news on release regions or dates, but given the Asia-centric reveal, we suspect it’s unlikely to be gearing up for a world tour.

[Thanks Kihoon]

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Sony Xperia P blushes in metallic pink originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Jul 2012 10:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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