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My purpose is to make sure that all of this information is not lost or deleted.
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(Speaking Chinese) We don't know what information and when the authorities will censor, so we are trying to be faster then the authorities.
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(Speaking Chinese) We should preserve the individual memories and our collective memories.
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Voices like these from Chinese citizens are very rare.
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People who are willing to speak out about the government's attempts to control news about the deadly coronavirus.
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They asked to remain anonymous, because what they're doing could put them and their families at great risk.
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But these people are part of a new wave of Chinese citizens, fighting to get the message out in a country that aggressively censors information.
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We have the right to speak, and we also have the right to save those words.
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Accounts or messages like these calling for free speech are quickly scrubbed from the internet.
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Or videos like this, showing people frustrated about life under lockdown.
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(Chinese) Help! Somebody please come!
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Posted online one day, but gone the next.
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But the crisis over the coronavirus is changing the landscape, for now at least.
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Everyday citizens are preserving and reposting information the government doesn't want out there.
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(Speaking Chinese) I don't want... Take away those who lie on the ground.
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I started to collect hundreds and hundreds of screenshots.
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And then as the outbreak got really bad, I thought it would be important to keep these or to collect and systematically archive this information.
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Experts say this kind of digital resistance is happening at a scale they've never seen before.
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At the beginning, I was just doing this on my own.
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And now, it's about a hundred of us, and we're translating news articles and social media posts that are constantly being deleted right now.
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Social media networks like YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter are blocked in China.
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But internet savvy people use techniques that allow them to repost censored content to these platforms, while staying under the radar of authorities.
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They're creating a visual archive by preserving videos like this one, showing overwhelmed hospitals.
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And they're reposting people's personal stories.
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(Speaking Chinese) Nobody cares about our lives, ordinary people's lives.
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(Speaking Chinese) You can't get medicine, even if you are rich.
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(Speaking Chinese) You can't get a hospital bed, even if you have money.
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Some are also turning to less obvious platforms, including GitHub, which is a site mostly used by coders.
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(Speaking Chinese) Many volunteer groups put their archives on GitHub.
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(Speaking Chinese) Other groups are sharing screenshots of censored posts from WeChat and Weibo on Telegram channels.
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Another taboo Chinese citizens are pushing back on?
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They're making open and widespread calls for freedom of speech.
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These were triggered by the death of Dr. Li Wenliang.
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He was an early whistleblower who warned about the virus, and was punished by officials for speaking out.
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He died in early February from the coronavirus.
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Right after his death, the hashtag "I want freedom of speech" started to trend on Weibo, a Chinese social media site.
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Then, it was quickly censored by the government.
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(Speaking Chinese) On the night of Le Wenliang's death, it seemed like everyone on Weibo suddenly realized that freedom of speech is important and that we want to speak.
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The censorship that followed just further kind of galvanized us, and made us feel that...
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really the government prioritizes censorship and suppressing free speech rather than acknowledging that they've made a mistake in arresting him.
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Dr. Li's become an icon in the online fight for freedom of speech between censors and citizens.
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So, who's winning?
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For now, citizens are staying a step ahead of the authorities.
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But a renewed government crackdown could test the strength of this digital resistance.