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Mysterious spate of official suicides in China sparks debate, censorship

BEIJING A series of mysterious apparent suicides by Chinese officials in the past three weeks, including of two senior figures, has sparked debate and questions among ordinary people here, as well as a fresh round of online censorship.

Was President Xi Jinpings anti-corruption drive putting so much pressure on his ruling Communist Party that some members were being driven to take their own lives? Was it all just a coincidence? Or does a life of deceit and hypocrisy eventually take its toll?

Chinese media reported Thursday that 58-year-old Xu Yean, a deputy director in the State Bureau for Letters and Calls, was found hanged in his office earlier in the week.

Xus department handles the petitions and complaints of ordinary citizens against local government officials. Although Xu had not been publicly linked with any corruption investigation, a senior colleague was fired and placed under investigation last November for a severe violation of party discipline.

Yu Jianrong, a professor at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS), was quoted as saying on social media at that time that the department had become one of the most corrupt sectors of the government, often using its power to extract bribes from local officials to silence complaints.

He Gaobo, a local official responsible for building safety in the city of Fenghua in the eastern province of Zhejiang, was found dead in another suspected suicide Wednesday, five days after an apartment building collapsed in the city.

Local media reported the building had been declared unsafe months before, but no action had been taken to repair it. Three people involved in the buildings construction have been arrested in connection with that case, media reported.

Last Friday, senior policeman Zhou Yu was found hanged in a hotel room in the central Chinese city of Chongqing. Zhou had been a major figure in a crackdown on organized crime in the city under the leadership of Bo Xilai, a senior Communist Party leader who was imprisoned for corruption. He was reported to be depressed about health issues related to diabetes and cirrhosis of the liver.

A senior official at state-owned power generation company Datang was also reported to have died in suspicious circumstances March 29, after being physically unwell and depressed, although the company denied it was suicide.

But perhaps the most sensational death of all was that of Li Wufeng, a 56-year-old known as Chinas top Internet cop, who was reportedly involved in maintaining a system of online censorship known as the Great Firewall of China. He was said to have jumped to his death from the sixth floor of his office building March 24 after constantly being in a bad mood, local media reported.

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Mysterious spate of official suicides in China sparks debate, censorship

George Zimmerman served divorced papers in jail – Video


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China's 'Facebook' CEO unfazed by stock drop

Adam Dean | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Joseph Chen, chief executive officer of Renren Inc

The company has come under pressure amid rising competition in China's social-networking space. It's also struggling to adapt to the rise of smartphones and mobile internet users.

Renren's net revenue declined 29 percent on year to $30.7 million in the final quarter of 2013, and it has warned investors to expect further declines in the current quarter.

While users spend 80 percent of their time on Renren via mobile devices, mobile makes up less than 10 percent of the company's online advertising revenues.

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During the fourth quarter, its online ad revenue tumbled 18 percent on year amid increased competition and continued migration of user traffic to mobile devices from desktop computers.

Chen said companies in the mainland are taking a lot longer to adapt their advertising strategies to the mobile platform.

He added that the companies need to figure out a way to monetize beyond advertising.

Read MoreA popular Chinese social networking app blazes its own path

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China's 'Facebook' CEO unfazed by stock drop

Ovum: A Wave of Consolidation Will Occur in Social Messaging in 2014

The recent acquisitions of WhatsApp by Facebook and Viber by Rakuten signal that social communications and particularly messaging are becoming a core part of OTT services whether their primary focus is social networking gaming or even commerce.

The research house, Ovum expects a wave of consolidation to occur in the social messaging industry in 2014, and some players will become formidable forces with their new backing. The next five years will be crucial for mobile operators in terms of both their messaging solutions and their overall communications suites as the handset balance tips in favour of smartphones. As more of the mobile subscriber base becomes able to access data services there will be an even stronger migration toward social messaging services and beyond, according to global analyst firm Ovum.

In a recent report, Ovum outlines its expectation that data and social messaging services will have over 2.6 billion subscribers by 2015. In addition to the growth in subscribers, the entire industry will see a widening in the breadth of services offered by messaging.

Neha Dharia, a consumer telecoms analyst at Ovum and author of the report, said, "Operators should work closely with OTT players and device vendors to create services that go beyond traditional communications, leverage operator strengths, are device agnostic, and can be sold to their consumers as subscription packages.

"Social messaging is a snapshot of things to come, and the traditional scope of messaging is already being tested -- payments, media sharing, and location are all being added to messaging platforms. In the long run, the opportunities for communications and messaging in particular are limitless, from motion sensors to gesture recognition to virtual screens projected on any surface."

The growth of social messaging has set off alarm bells for several mobile operators and vendors. The industry realizes that it is time for messaging to use the IP channel to move beyond pure text to a media-rich experience. Operators have introduced a series of initiatives around pricing, WebRTC, RCS, and, of course, operator led apps. The key hurdle lies in operators trying to catch up with social messaging players, and they must study the growth of OTT communications and create future-proof services.

Ovum's report A Guide to the Future of Mobile Messaging sheds light on when current technologies are likely to mature, and which technologies are likely disruptors to the status quo. It provides guidance for operators, vendors, and even OTT players on how to plan for the future.

The messaging industry is evolving at a rapid pace, which makes it important to understand the direction of its evolution. Services such as email will have less significance in peer-to-peer communication within messaging. This is not to say that email will no longer exist, but it will change its service proposition, perhaps being amalgamated with other services such as social networking.

Dharia states that, "In 2014 we can expect a range of new services to be included on messaging platforms; we will see them grow beyond messaging into complete mobile media platforms. In fact, in the near future the services offered will be voice calls, video calls, messaging, and utility services that are intuitive to users' needs and move seamlessly between devices."

According to Ovum's research, "Within 10 years messaging and communications services will become intuitive and will involve less human instruction. Services will be able to choose the communications channel most suited for a particular conversation, and will switch between media sharing, video, and text messaging depending on the user's needs.

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Ovum: A Wave of Consolidation Will Occur in Social Messaging in 2014