China plans to launch its own online encyclopaedia next year, hoping to build a "cultural Great Wall" that can rival Wikipedia as a go-to information source for Chinese Internet users who Beijing fears are being corrupted by foreign influences.
The project, which will be under the guidance of the state-owned China Publishing Group, "must have Chinese characteristics," , it would be a "symbol of the country's cultural and technological development" and increase its softpower and international influence.
Unlike Wikipedia, and its Chinese version Baidu Baike, which are written by volunteers and are in a constant state of revision, the new project, which was approved in 2011, will be entirely written by professionals.
The new encyclopaedia will be based on a previous printed version, published in book form in 1993. A second edition, which can be accessed through a special terminal, was released in 2009.
The newest version will be released online before being published in a bound edition.
China has over 700 million internet users but a 2015 report by US think tank Freedom House found that the country had the most restrictive online use policies of 65 nations it studied, ranking below Iran and Syria.
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