Transnational Chinese cybersects include the group commonly known in the West as
Falun Gong (法轮功),
Zhong Gong (中华养生益智功), and the Taiwan-based group founded by Suma
Ching Hai, commonly referred to in the PRC as
Guanyin Famen (观音法门), but rendered in English by the Ching Hai World Society as Quan Yin. Some new transnational Protestant groups also subjected to persecution in the PRC, like
Eastern Lightning, have likewise taken to the internet to ensure group survival, and taken on some of the characteristics of cybersects elsewhere. Like the New Cyberreligious Movements (NCRMs) described by Karaflogka, cybersect participants rely upon
computer mediated communication (CMC) in their personal religious or spiritual practice, performing cyberpilgrimages, participating in cybermeditation sessions online, and/or cyberevangelism in third-party chatrooms. Some cybersect members of groups, including
Aum Shinrikyo and
al Qaeda, engage in "repertoires of electronic contention," using websites and e-mail to mobilize participants for protest and contention, as well as
hactivism (acts of electronic disruption) and even
cyberterrorism (acts of physical harm caused by the disruption of power grids, traffic control, and other systems of resource delivery and public safety). ==Among Muslims==