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Alibaba reportedly behind popular Chinese Communist Party app

  • Tens of thousands of companies and organisations have developed applications based on the DingTalk platform, says Alibaba

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Chinese President Xi Jinping addresses the Central Economic Work Conference in Beijing in December. Photo: Xinhua

Alibaba Group Holding said its DingTalk open technology platform is used to create thousands of apps, in response to a Reuters report about its role in a popular Chinese government propaganda app.

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Reuters reported on Monday that Xuexi Qiangguo, translated as “Study powerful country” in Mandarin, was developed and maintained by Alibaba staff using DingTalk’s software – the e-commerce giant’s own enterprise communication and collaboration platform.

Released by the Communist Party’s publicity department in January, Xuexi Qiangguo mostly serves as a news aggregation platform for articles, short video clips and documentaries about President Xi Jinping’s political philosophy.

Xuexi Qiangguo has become the most downloaded app on Apple’s domestic App Store, surpassing in demand social media apps such as WeChat and TikTok – known as Weixin and Douyin, respectively, in mainland China.

“Tens of thousands of companies and organisations have developed and are developing applications based on the DingTalk platform,” said a DingTalk spokeswoman in a statement, without referring to Xuexi Qiangguo. “That is testament to its strong, reliable infrastructure and ease-of-use.” Calls to the publicity department of the Communist Party went unanswered.

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New York-listed Alibaba, China’s largest e-commerce company that has businesses in everything from payments to messaging apps, is also the parent company of the South China Morning Post.

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