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College Daily
留学生日报
Formation2014
FounderGuoyu Timothy Lin
Founded at Columbus, Ohio
TypeNew media
Headquarters Times Square
Location
Staff (2021)
52
Website www.collegedaily.cn
College Daily
Simplified Chinese留学生日报
Traditional Chinese留學生日報
Literal meaningNorth America Students Studying Abroad Daily Newspaper

College Daily ( Chinese: 留学生日报) is a new media publication whose primary audience is Chinese students studying in North America.

Overview

College Daily was founded in 2014 and expanded from there. The primary audience is overseas Chinese students, particularly those studying in North America.[ citation needed]

In August 2019, The New Yorker published a story about College Daily, calling it a "post-truth" publication where Chinese students in the U.S. receive their news." The story noted that College Daily had aggregated and reproduced content sourced from Infowars and RT as well as state propaganda outlets such as Sputnik News. [1]

As of August 2019 the College Daily employed 30 in their Beijing office and 15 at their New York City office.[ citation needed]

CollegeDaily has raised a total of $3M in funding over 1 round. This was a Series A round raised on Nov 28, 2017.[ citation needed]

CollegeDaily is funded by 3 investors. Tencent Holdings and CMC Capital Group are the most recent investors.[ citation needed]

College Daily articles about Yale have been linked to Chinese state propaganda by the Yale Daily News. [2]

History

CollegeDaily.cn is a Beijing-based news and information platform targeting international Chinese students as well as international college and university faculty and Student Affairs professionals.[ citation needed]

Founded in 2014, CollegeDailyCN has grown to cover most of international students studying in North America. Every day, over 500,000 reader get useful information from its multiple platforms. It also has a team of student journalists and editors who provide useful articles and researches to the readers.[ citation needed]

The College Daily has spread misleading and false information about the 2019 Hong Kong Protests including that protesters would receive a $20 million reward for killing a police officer. The Diplomat described their efforts to spread misleading information as “notorious." [3]

In September 2019 the College Daily published a story calling for Australian journalist and academic Vicky Xiuzhong Xu’s estranged father to be expelled from China due to her outspoken journalism. The article asserted that Xu was an “American mouthpiece” and that she only criticized the Chinese government in order to get political asylum in Australia. [4]

See also

References

  1. ^ Zhang, Han (2019-08-19). "The "Post-Truth" Publication Where Chinese Students in America Get Their News". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2021-07-19.
  2. ^ Schrader, Isaiah. "SCHRADER: Beijing comes to Yale". yaledailynews.com. Yale Daily News. Retrieved 23 November 2019.
  3. ^ Jung, Chauncey. "China's Changing PR Strategy for the Hong Kong Protests". thediplomat.com. The Diplomat. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
  4. ^ Bonyhady, Nick. "Outspoken journalist in Australia and father in China harassed online". www.smh.com.au. The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 23 November 2019.