Digital Transactions in Asia This book presents a comprehensive overview of transactional forms of the digital across Asia by studying the platforms and infrastructures that shape the digital experience. It provides a definitive account of the core features of the ways the digital economy in Asia is transforming every- day lives. Transactional relations between digital media platforms and new forms of sociability are remediating social relationships for the digital age. In capturing the digital revolution through case studies from across the larger Asian region, the book offers a richly contextualised and com- parative account that firmly situates the frontiers of the digital within the Asian experience. The book will be a key reference point for scholars and students of Asian studies and media studies, and of particular value to the range of interdisciplinary courses now emerging on digital and social change with an international focus. The increasing internationalisation of debates on the digital will also make this book essential reading for researchers and students more widely in mass communications, development studies, business studies, sociology and economics. Adrian Athique is an Associate Professor in cultural studies in the Insti- tute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities, University of Queensland. Emma Baulch is an Associate Professor of communication and media studies at Monash University Malaysia. Routledge Research in Digital Media and Culture in Asia Edited by Dal Yong Jin, Simon Fraser University Chinese Social Media Social, Cultural, and Political Implications Edited by Mike Kent, Katie Ellis, and Jian Xu Digital Media and Risk Culture in China’s Financial Markets Zhifei Mao Mediatized Religion in Asia Studies on Digital Media and Religion Edited by Kerstin Radde-Antweiler and Xenia Zeiler Digital Transactions in Asia Economic, Informational, and Social Exchanges Edited by Adrian Athique and Emma Baulch Digital Transactions in Asia Economic, Informational, and Social Exchanges Edited by Adrian Athique and Emma Baulch First published 2019 by Routledge 52 Vanderbilt Avenue, New York, NY 10017 and by Routledge 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business © 2019 Taylor & Francis The right of Adrian Athique and Emma Baulch to be identified as the authors of the editorial material, and of the authors for their individual chapters, has been asserted in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Athique, Adrian, editor. | Baulch, Emma, 1968– editor. Title: Digital transactions in Asia : economic, informational, and social exchanges / edited by Adrian Athique and Emma Baulch. Description: New York, NY: Routledge, 2019. | Series: Routledge research in digital media and culture in Asia | Includes bibliographical references and index. Identifiers: LCCN 2018058036 (print) | LCCN 2018059936 (ebook) Subjects: LCSH: Information society—Asia. | Digital media— Economic aspects—Asia. | Digital media—Social aspects—Asia. | Information technology—Economic aspects—Asia. | Information technology—Social aspects—Asia. Classification: LCC HN655.2.I56 (ebook) | LCC HN655.2.I56 D545 2019 (print) | DDC 302.23/1095—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018058036 ISBN: 978-1-138-35396-1 (hbk) ISBN: 978-0-429-42511-0 (ebk) Typeset in Sabon by codeMantra Contents Acknowledgements vii 1 Digital Transactions in Asia 1 ADRIAN ATHIQUE PART 1 Platforms, Infrastructure and Regulation 23 2 Zhejiang’s Digital Dream 25 MICHAEL KEANE AND HUAN WU 3 Infrastructure and Platform Anxieties in India 44 PRADIP THOMAS 4 Recalibrating China in a Time of Platforms 63 TOM O’REgAN AND LUzHOU LI 5 Demonetization: India’s Year of Living Digitally 83 ADRIAN ATHIQUE 6 Another Dimension of Digital: 3D Printing and Intellectual Property in Asia 104 ANgELA DALY, JIAJIE LU AND LUKE HEEMSBERgEN 7 Digital Rights in Asia: Rethinking Regional and International Agendas 119 gERARD gOggIN, MICHELE FORD, FIONA MARTIN, ADELE WEBB, ARIADNE VROMEN, AND KIMBERLEE WEATHERALL vi Contents PART 2 Financial, Social and Cultural Transactions 137 8 Embedding Digital Money amongst Chinese Migrant Factory Workers 139 TOM MCDONALD 9 The Digital State: A Tale of Tweets and Foods in Contemporary India 156 RAJIV K. MISHRA 10 ‘Skill-Makers’ in the Platform Economy: Transacting Digital Labour 172 CHERYLL RUTH R. SORIANO AND JOY HANNAH C. PANALIgAN 11 The Enterprising Self: Disability and Digital Entrepreneurship in China 192 HAIQINg YU 12 Resilient Love: Intimacy, Social Media Surveillance and (Dis)Trust in Metro Manila 209 JOzON A. LORENzANA 13 Chinese Transcreators, Webtoons and the Korean Digital Wave 224 BRIAN YECIES, AEgYUNg SHIM AND JACK YANg 14 Insurrectionary Tendencies: The Viral Fever Comedies and Indian Media 242 AKSHAYA KUMAR 15 Hijabers on Instagram: Visualising the Ideal Muslim Woman 260 EMMA BAULCH AND ALILA PRAMIYANTI List of Contributors 285 Index 291 Acknowledgements This first collection on Digital Transactions in Asia emerges from a sub- stantial collective effort, involving all our contributors here, along with many others who deserve acknowledgement for their support. Terry Flew, Jean Burgess and Mandy Thomas provided us with fantastic sup- port for our first Digital Transactions event in Brisbane in August 2017. We would also like to thank our keynote and invited speakers at that event: gerard goggin, Yu Hong, Michael Keane, John Postill, Vibodh Parthasarathi, Cheryll Ruth R. Soriano and Ravi Sundaram. Thanks are also due to Shishir Jha and Vibodh, once again, for their academic in- sight, empirical expertise and logistical support for Social Transactions in Digital India held at IIT Bombay in December 2017. For our second Digital Transactions in Asia event at De La Salle Manila, which is taking place as this book goes to press, we would like to thank Professor Merlin Teodosia Suarez, Professor Raymond Tan, Professor Caridad Tarroja and Professor Jazmin Llana for institutional and intellectual contribu- tions of great value. We would like to thank our keynote speakers in Manila: Rich Ling, Raul Pertierra and Jack Qiu. Across all three events so far, we would like to recognise the generosity and sheer effort of our organising teams, including Terry Flew, Shishir Jha, Luzhuo Nina Li, Sun Sun Lim, Jozon A. Lorenzana, Vibodh Parthasarathi and Cheryll Ruth R. Soriano. We would also like to thank Peter Harrison, Narelle Jones and Masako Suzoki at the University of Queensland for making a series of complex transactions in support of our collective efforts. With- out the enthusiasm, academic expertise and collaborative spirit of all these people, initiatives like this don’t happen. In terms of institutional support, we will remain very grateful to the Institute for Advanced Stud- ies in the Humanities at the University of Queensland, the Digital Media Research Centre at Queensland University of Technology, the Shailash J. Mehta School of Management at IIT Bombay and the Social Devel- opment Research Centre and Department of Communication at De La Salle University. 1 Digital Transactions in Asia Adrian Athique Asia in the Digital Age The number of internet users in Asia is now equivalent to those in the rest of the world combined (at two billion) (Internet World Stats 2017). given their effective convergence over the past decade, the same dy- namic carries over into the mobile domain, with phone subscribers in Asia marking more than half of the global total of 4.8 billion. There is more to come– just under half of the population of China, two thirds of India and a third of Indonesia and the Philippines are yet to come online (ITU 2018). given that that uptake continues to increase and the major- ity of the global population lives in the Asian region, it is clear that we have passed the tipping point towards a digital system where Asia will be predominant. From where we are now, we can already discern some of the substantive changes that digital technologies have brought to the political, economic and social domains within, and between, the Asian states. In the global context, both the connections and disconnections of Digital Asia serve to demonstrate that the old binaries of the West-and- rest digital divide are being superseded by the dynamics of the region itself. Large-scale investments in digital infrastructure from North to South are reshaping the economic and social geography of Asia. After many decades of developing manufacturing chains and operating labour markets within the global digital economy, we now stand at a junc- ture where the regional potentials of these technologies have become paramount. Critical mass in the scale of Digital Asia should not obscure the di- versity, disparity and disjunctures across this vast region. User numbers alone do not explicate the deeper meanings that situate everyday us- age and experience of the digital in and across Asian cultures. South Korea is an epicentre of the global digital economy, while North Korea is one of the few truly black spots in terms of both digital culture and infrastructure. Even as Singapore establishes its position as a warehouse and financial hub for the cloud economy, the digital infrastructure in Afghanistan is primarily a matrix for murder. India’s digital agenda gives