• Baidu Talk (
百度说吧), launched by
Baidu, closed • Digu (
嘀咕) •
Fanfou (
饭否), one of the earliest weibo services, highly similar to
Twitter, closed due to Chinese
censorship, re-opened in November 2010 • Follow5 • Hexun Weibo (和讯微博), launched by Hexun • Jiwai (叽歪) • NetEase Weibo (
网易微博), launched by
NetEase • People's Weibo (人民微博), launched by ''
People's Daily'' • Phoenix Weibo (凤凰微博), launched by
Phoenix Television •
Sina Weibo (
新浪微博), launched by
SINA Corporation, by far the most popular weibo in China, with over 300 million users (Official website) • Sohu Weibo (
搜狐微博), launched by
Sohu •
Tencent Weibo (
腾讯微博), launched by
Tencent Holdings • Tianya Weibo (天涯微博), launched by
Tianya Club • Xinhua Weibo (新华微博), launched by
Xinhua News Agency • Zuosa (做啥) • CNTV Weibo (央视微博), launched by
CNTV ==Chinese microbloggers on Twitter==
Ai Wei-wei, a well-known Chinese artist and activist, who has been arrested and controlled by the Chinese government, is one of the most active Chinese microbloggers on Twitter. Due to the strict Internet censorship policy on microblogging enacted by the
CPC government, a number of Chinese microbloggers choose to make posts that contain "sensitive contents" on Twitter. Although Twitter has been blocked in China since 2009, most Twitter users who reside in China can access the Twitter website using a
proxy. More information can be found on
List of websites blocked in China. Twitter users include Chinese nationals, who participated in, or led, the
Chinese democracy movement that took place on June 4, 1989, such as
Liu Xiaobo, the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize winner and a
political prisoner in China. Weibo's most significant competition is rival microblogging service, WeChat, as of 2014 the country's leading messaging application. ==See also==