Some advertisers spend on relevant keywords, others pay for generalized brand awareness. Many do both.
Anything published by a government in a foreign language has an agenda. It's propaganda. In this case, "brand awareness" propaganda.
Maybe the goal is to promote tourism, or to give a boost to exports.
Maybe it's to keep the country/government in the front of foreign readers' minds, to foster a sense of commonality or appreciation.
Whatever. There's an agenda. It's worth discussing and thinking about.
Like with advertising, it's important to know what role you are playing in the publisher's agenda. Accepting the material uncritically is not a neutral position -- it makes you a unwitting player in their game.
You are completely correct that the US does it too, both internally (presidential mythologies, to use your example) and externally (Radio Free X etc etc).
Propaganda is common though. Many companies have their own newsletter and plenty do paid advertising, some in subtle ways. Plenty of scientific research is paid for by companies for their own gain. Authors are destined to propagate their own opinion and mind. That doesn’t however means anything that’s not complete neutral is pointless. An echo chamber is very much like propaganda, few people is going to speak out against the majority. Our training should be to obtain useful information from the massively available information, not disregard everything.
I'm glad you see it that way. My response was so flippant because I do think people often see China as personally run, in its entirety, by Xi. Any news coming out of China, from as grave as genocide to as minor as Olympics festivals, is seen as part of a single plan. The actions of the Chinese gov't and press can be just as much bottom-up as top-down, even if the top takes credit.
Some advertisers spend on relevant keywords, others pay for generalized brand awareness. Many do both.
Anything published by a government in a foreign language has an agenda. It's propaganda. In this case, "brand awareness" propaganda.
Maybe the goal is to promote tourism, or to give a boost to exports.
Maybe it's to keep the country/government in the front of foreign readers' minds, to foster a sense of commonality or appreciation.
Whatever. There's an agenda. It's worth discussing and thinking about.
Like with advertising, it's important to know what role you are playing in the publisher's agenda. Accepting the material uncritically is not a neutral position -- it makes you a unwitting player in their game.
You are completely correct that the US does it too, both internally (presidential mythologies, to use your example) and externally (Radio Free X etc etc).