Newstral
Article
South China Morning Post on 2019-05-24 10:39
Chinese ‘gay fiction’ website told to stop publishing obscene content
Related news
- China's Weibo is purging violent and gay-themed contentengadget
- MChina bans foreign publishing content onlinemarketwatch.com
- Education Ministry removes LGBTQ content from websiteYnetnews
- The Future of Brand Publishing and Content in Artificial Intelligencehuffingtonpost.com
- China Bans Gay Content Online (Report)variety.com
- Weibo U-turns on gay content censorshipCNN
- STikTok Tracked Users Who Watched Gay Contentstarobserver.com.au
- Website chronicles China’s massive effort to control Internet contentinfowars.com
- Chinese social media giant backtracks from gay content banNew York Post
- China Censors Gay Content in 'Friends,' Prompting Online Outcrybreitbart.com
- TikTok reportedly monitored users who watched gay contentNew York Post
- BChina's Sina Weibo backtracks from gay content ban after outragebbc.co.uk
- ‘I Am Gay, Not a Pervert’: Furor Erupts in China as Sina Weibo Bans Gay ContentThe New York Times
- Chinese Duowei News closes its doors, with content taken from website and app removedSouth China Morning Post
- Sina Weibo, China’s social media giant, reverses ban on gay content after weekend of protestsWashington Post
- MChinese film festival pulls “Call Me by Your Name,” likely due to gay contentmetroweekly.com
- Four Tips For Publishing Powerful Blog ContentForbes
- Russia summons US envoy for publishing protest mapPressTV
- China to stop publishing daily COVID figures of cases, deathsAl Jazeera
- Coronavirus Q&A: separating fact from fictiontimesofmalta.com