A convergence of two distinctly different but strategically linked regulatory actions this week signals a fundamental shift in how states are responding to the weaponisation of digital content. Beijing’s sudden and brutal crackdown on so-called ‘micro dramas’—short-form video narratives that have exploded onto platforms like Douyin and Kuaishou—must not be dismissed as mere cultural conservatism. In London, the UK media regulator Ofcom has published a stark warning about the systemic risks posed by online extremism, a move that echoes the underlying logic of Beijing’s action. The threat vector is identical: the manipulation of human cognition through algorithmic content delivery to achieve strategic effects. The West is late to this realisation, and the gap in operational readiness is widening.
China’s move targets a specific vulnerability in its own information ecosystem. Micro dramas, often dismissed as disposable entertainment, have proven to be potent vehicles for coded subversion. Their format—highly emotional, rapid narrative beats designed to maximise viewer retention—bypasses the prefrontal cortex and implants emotional responses directly. Chinese authorities have identified that these narratives are being used to seed anti-state sentiment, promote materialistic values, and even glorify historical figures with contested legacies. This is not censorship for its own sake. This is a defensive cyber operation against a psychological warfare campaign that external bad actors have been running using Chinese citizens’ own attention spans. The West should be taking notes.
Ofcom’s warning, meanwhile, is a belated acknowledgment of the same problem. The regulator’s report highlights that online platforms are systematically radicalising individuals through the very same engagement-optimisation algorithms. The UK’s approach, however, remains mired in proceduralism: consultation papers, voluntary codes of conduct, and a reliance on platform self-policing. This is a strategic failure of the first order. The threat is not merely ‘extremist content’ of the sort that beheads videos in the 2010s. The new threat is the low-grade, high-volume distribution of narratives that erode trust in institutions, normalise violence, and create a permission structure for lone-actor attacks. The UK’s response lacks the operational tempo required to counter an adversary that can iterate propaganda in hours.
Let me be coldly specific. The hardware of the modern propaganda war is not a missile; it is a recommendation engine. The logistics are not supply chains; they are data lakes housing user behaviour profiles. The intelligence failure currently plaguing Western security services is their inability to recognise that the battlefield is the individual user’s newsfeed. China’s solution—draconian, yes—is operationally coherent: hit the platform, suppress the narrative, purge the behavioural loop. The UK’s solution—more regulation, more funding for civil society—is a political expedient that will fail in the face of an adaptive adversary.
Consider the asymmetry of the threat. A hostile state actor can, for the cost of a server farm and a few dozen trolls, destabilise an entire region’s youth. The UK’s counter is to create a new government agency that will hold workshops. Meanwhile, the algorithm optimises for outrage because outrage drives retention. The UK’s media literacy campaigns are a tactical solution to a strategic problem. They are the equivalent of issuing helmets to soldiers while the enemy is using chemical weapons.
The Chinese crackdown on micro dramas is instructive not because it is a model to be copied—the UK’s legal and cultural framework cannot support that level of centralised control—but because it demonstrates that a state can achieve information dominance when it treats content as a weapon system. The UK must pivot from a defensive, reactive posture to an offensive, pre-emptive one. This means legislative empowerment for Ofcom to suspend algorithms that demonstrably harm national security. It means real-time coordination with Five Eyes partners on narrative threat assessments. It means accepting that the era of laissez-faire digital governance is over. The enemy is not the platform; the enemy is the attention economy that platforms have perfected. Until the UK treats that economy as a hostile operating environment, it will continue to lose the cognitive battlespace.
The signal from Beijing and London is clear. The threat is real. The question is whether the West can operationalise its response before the next viral narrative triggers the next real-world casualty.








