The country's railway authority has encountered a public outcry, instead of the thunderous applause it expected, at the very beginning of its move to practice a real-name purchasing system for high-speed train tickets.
The real-name system demands passengers use one of 23 types of valid identification, including residence permits and passports, when buying tickets for one of these trains.
The real-name ticket-buying system, if smoothly operated, would symbolize a positive step by the "Big Railway Brother" - a popular name for the Ministry of Railways because of its dominant status in the country's transport system - toward improving its long-controversial rail services.
The public has long been calling for a real-name ticket-buying system, especially for the annual Spring Festival period when ordinary Chinese people face an unprecedented challenge getting a train ticket so they can return home for their traditional family reunion.
In the second decade of the 21st century, the country is already technologically equipped to operate a real-name ticket system for the railways. From a technical perspective, it should be no more difficult than purchasing a real-name ticket for a flight.
However, the railway authority has from the beginning hurled itself into a maelstrom of public controversy.