To answer the first point about authoritarian regimes likening each other and collaborating, they collaborate directly and indirectly. Unfortunately, there's a form of collaboration whereby they literally send experts from China to other countries to teach them how to manage things, how to run things.
They do that with media and journalism in the Middle East, for example. They do that also in east Africa, where they will take people from the government or from the media to China to train them and prepare them. They don't hide it. They call it something like “telling the stories of China”, which means I'm going to teach you and train you how to do reporting the Chinese way to tell our stories.
They directly collaborate with these entities, and there is the indirect collaboration to the effect, “I'm sending you the blueprint. This works; this doesn't work”. That was implemented in two different places, in Vietnam, for example, in the early 1990s, where they paused laws. They wanted to go to more press freedom, but they made a law that you cannot publish anything without sending it first to a committee of the Communist Party in Vietnam. They meet every Tuesday, and they have to approve it; otherwise, you're committing a crime.
They did the same thing in Syria. They provided them with an approach where they could go into a more free market, but also saying to them that you don't have to have else free. You can keep all the political power and the media under your control, and you can benefit the people around the regime and the party officials, the high-ranking members.
When it comes to the geographic scope of it, I have a long list of documented actions by China. In my case, I focus more on the Indo-Pacific region, which is a massive region and has huge interests for both Canada and the global economy, etc.
The most terrifying things—I don't know what to call them—is that there are different approaches. In the private sector in Indonesia, for example, there is TV network. They buy time from them and they broadcast shows they produce. It's without any questioning, and it doesn't go through any editorial lines. There's no code of ethics for journalism. It's published or broadcasted exactly as if it were propaganda. The same applies to another radio network.
If we go to a different, more sophisticated approach, we can look at Pakistan. There is something called the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor Media Forum, under which they're including how to fight misinformation that's deemed by the two governments to be propaganda and inappropriate.
It's cross-country collaboration that is being done to go after press freedom everywhere that is in their interest.