The Wall Street Journal recently revealed that a senior executive of Chinese Internet giant Tencent was arrested in a disciplinary case involving Sun Lijun, which experts believe is another Chinese Internet platform giant being purged after Alibaba’s Jack Ma. Coincidentally, some netizens have recently reported that an application called “Picture Red Packet” of Tencent’s communication software “qq” has been urgently removed from the market due to its insinuation of the dictatorship of China’s top leader Xi Jinping, and many netizens are discussing whether the two incidents are related.
The App‘s gameplay is to draw a pattern through a specified idiom prompt, and if the system determines that the drawing meets the requirements, you will receive a red envelope. However, according to overseas netizens on Twitter, recently, the “drawing red packet” about the idiom “one hand to cover the sky” prompt, according to the original teaching film, to crack the phrase, you need to draw a horizontal line, and then draw four dots under the horizontal line, you can identify through.
The company’s main goal is to provide a solution to the problem of the problem.
Tencent officially claimed that the downgrade was to “optimize the playing experience” and improve the feature, but netizens questioned the timing of the downgrade as it coincided with the Lunar New Year, which is the peak season for the use of the feature.
The Wall Street Journal previously cited sources familiar with the matter as saying that Zhang Feng, vice president of Tencent Holdings, had been detained by Chinese officials for allegedly sharing Tencent’s WeChat personal information without authorization to former Vice Minister of Public Security Sun Lijun, who was investigated by the Communist Party’s Central Commission for Discipline Inspection last year for “allegedly committing serious disciplinary violations. After Zhang Feng’s investigation, Tencent founder and CEO Ma Huateng has not made any public appearances in China and was absent from the National People’s Congress and the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference in May last year.
Many netizens have been debating whether the two incidents are related, as they coincide with the “Xi Jinping single-handedly overshadowed” mess at Tencent QQ. Some people tweeted back, “Delete when you say delete, isn’t that just one hand covering the sky?” “Wasn’t Tencent executive Zhang Feng arrested? Is there any relationship with this?”
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