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8 out of 10 Facebook users in China are Males

Facebook is banned in China. But somehow, the number of Facebok users in China has ballooned in recent months, almost reaching 700,000. I got curious and checked out Social Bakers to understand the statistic better.

The chart below captured my attention immediately: 79 percent of Facebook users in China are males. That is of course, a highly imbalanced male-female ratio, especially when we learned that women rule social media.

Why the imbalanced gender ratio? It is probably triggered by Mark Zuckerberg’s visit to China last year. His presence somehow made Facebook better known among Chinese males. A Chinese friend of mine previously shared with me that Mark Zuckerberg is pretty well known in the Chinese Internet community. His visit to China last year was widely publicized in tech blogs and Chinese social networks where readers are usually males. I mean… a successful entrepreneur like Zuckerberg will influence other like-minded entrepreneurs. In the entrepreneurial community, most are males as well, which explains the imbalance gender ratio.

China’s ban on Facebook didn’t stop users from using the service. AnchorFree, a Mountain View, California-based startup, said it saw 1.5 million people using its free VPN service in China during January, a 25 percent increase from the previous month, the Businessweek reported.

With more Chinese Internet users logging on to Facebook through VPNs, we can expect the number of Facebook users in China to continue growing. Meanwhile, I wonder what it takes to trigger Chinese females to join the service. Any thoughts?

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Tags: Asia, China, Facebook, facebook china, Mark Zuckerberg

About Willis Wee

Founder of Tech in Asia who is also an entrepreneur since 2005. Contact him at willis[at]techinasia[dot]com

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Lin_wen says:

if that’s the case then you’ll end up having a lot of inactive accounts. it’s probably two reasons: 1. the user base is primarily in the expats, which tends to have more male than female; 2. you need to be very tech savvy to get thru the fire wall, which again tends to skew it to the male.

Willis Wee says:

It’s banned because of political controls. Chinese use Renren, a “Facebook” of China. :)

Fran says:

Maybe they won’t let them. I assume they could be a little controlling, or the men are a little more braver to risk what they say on facebook and possibly get killed for it?

Fran Aslam says:

Surprising statistics, though Facebook is banned in China. But why is it banned? Does anyone know?

I wish I knew after knowing that so many people log in to Facbook from there.

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