Chinese Video Takes Aim at Online Censorship

WSJ.com

The latest battle over Internet freedom in China is playing out in an online movie that pits an armored blue beast and his band of antiauthoritarian rogues against a sinister force called Harmony that seeks to clean up the Web.

The video, called “War of Internet Addiction,” is a send-up of government censorship starring videogame characters that has become one of the hottest things on the Chinese Internet, epitomizing the unruly spirit that thrives on the Web despite an intensifying crackdown on free expression in China.

The 64-minute video consists entirely of footage shot in the virtual universe of “World of Warcraft,” a wildly popular online game from Activision Blizzard Inc. in which millions of players around the world do battle via magical avatars.

The movie’s plot centers on gamers’ frustration with an actual bureaucratic battle over regulation of the Chinese edition of the game, but its subtext is a broad, biting allegory of the fight against government Internet controls, peppered with allusions to a list of real-world conflicts in China over the past year. The Chinese version of World of Warcraft is licensed by Netease.com Inc. and is operated independently from overseas versions of the game.

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