Glimpses of China’s parallel tech universe

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
What can we learn from DETECTIVE CHINATOWN 2 Quite a lot, actually
The 11th biggest box-office hit of the year, it vastly outgrossed the likes of SOLO: A STAR WARS STORY, A STAR IS BORN, and CRAZY RICH
ASIANS
You may never have heard of it, though; like OPERATION RED SEA, the 10th biggest hit of the year, it made all of its money in China. What
can a slapstick-meets-Sherlock-Holmes comedy tell us about technology Quite a lot, if we read its subtext
One striking thing: it hard to think of any big recent American movie in which smartphone apps are so woven into the plot
The movie characters are brought together, and constantly reference, are brought together by one smartphone app; when imprisoned, our young
genius Chinese detective laments, most of all, the loss of his phone; and when its blue-haired woman hacker asks the protagonist, &add me on
WeChat& early on, it seems like a cute throwaway line, but their WeChat conversations are fundamental to the plot as the movie
progresses. It also striking that Western tech has become so hegemonic that it actually seems slightly jarring to see characters using a
chat app which is not iMessage / FB Messenger / WhatsApp
The Internet proper may be globally pervasive, at the TCP/IP level, but we live in two different online worlds; one of Facebook / Google /
Amazon, and one of Tencent / Baidu / Alibaba, with Apple as the only company which seems to be bridge both worlds
This extends to payments, too; I was in China earlier this year, and was struck by in how many places — including McDonald&s! — Visa and
Mastercard were useless, and the only viable Western-origin payment method was Apple Pay. It easy and obviously somewhat correct to blame
the Great Firewall for this
(Although the West is not without its own firewalls; I&m in Paris as I write this, and my attempt to read some back-home San Francisco news
was just met with the &451 Unavailable for Legal Reasons& response pictured above, presumably courtesy of the GDPR.) But Chinese apps, and
Chinese hardware, have long since transcended being knockoff copies of Western technology; they do their own things now, and they often do
them better. It been a remarkable rise
Back in 2011, while traveling in Ethiopia, I noticed with surprised curiosity that my hotel wi-fi was all run by a stack of Chinese hardware
and software; seven years later, here in Paris, I keep passing glittering posters twenty feet tall extolling Huawei latest smartphone. As
China rises in power, it and America seem to increasingly see one another as a threat
(Again, it just a movie, but you can learn a lot about default cultural assumptions from movies, and OPERATION RED SEA, which is basically
&BLACK HAWK DOWN meets chest-beating hagiography of the Chinese military,& ends with a cliffhanger standoff between the Chinese and American
navies.) And certainly China government does horrifying things beyond its infamous censorship, such as interning an estimated million
Muslims essentially because they are Muslim. But from a purely technical point of view, Western online technology has — unexpectedly —
become so hegemonic itself that the rampant growth of a whole different stack of apps and services is an interesting development in and of
itself
For now, China parallel universe exists primarily within China, and doesn&t affect the rest of the world — but that already beginning to
change, as this WeChat-in-San-Francisco-politics story indicates
As China engages more and more with the West, we&re going to see its tech overlap with ours in curious ways
May you live in interesting times, indeed.