Beijing Review

Beijing Review (Chinese: 北京周報; pinyin: Běijīng Zhōubào; Wade–Giles: Pei-ching Yu-pao), previously Peking Review, is China's only national news magazine in English, published by the China International Publishing Group. In 2006 it claimed a per-issue circulation of 70,000 and distribution "throughout China and 150 countries and regions worldwide."[2]

Beijing Review
Peking Review front page from 13 October 1959
TypeWeekly
FoundedMarch 1958
Political alignmentCommunist Party of China
LanguageEnglish, Japanese, French, German and Chinese[1]
HeadquartersBeijing
Websitewww.bjreview.com

Overview

Founded in March 1958[3] as the weekly Peking Review, it was an important tool for the Chinese government to communicate to the rest of world. The first issue included an editor's note explaining that the magazine was meant to "provide timely, accurate, first-hand information on economic, political and cultural developments in China, and her relations with the rest of the world."[4]

gollark: Those websites probably use youtube-dl anyway.
gollark: That's only specified for IPv4.
gollark: Side channels are where instead of looking at the obvious inputs/outputs of a system you look at other information which might be affected by what it's doing, like a chip's power draw, electromagnetic radiation from it, or timing.
gollark: There's some weirdness where it's not *strictly* rolled back entirely so some information can be extracted through bizarre side channels.
gollark: Spectre/Meltdown work using weirdness in speculative execution, which is where the CPU executes stuff faster by assuming one possibility is true then rolling it back if it's wrong.

References

  1. "About BEIJING REVIEW". Archived from the original on 26 October 2010. Retrieved 26 October 2013.
  2. "Beijing Review: Introduction". Beijing Review. 20 December 2006. Archived from the original on 26 October 2010. Retrieved 16 October 2010.
  3. Europa World Year. Taylor & Francis Group. 2004. p. 1142. ISBN 978-1-85743-254-1. Retrieved 10 May 2016.
  4. "Peking Review" (PDF). Marxists. 4 March 1958. Archived (PDF) from the original on 6 June 2011. Retrieved 16 October 2010.
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