日韩午夜精品视频,欧美私密网站,国产一区二区三区四区,国产主播一区二区三区四区

 

Baidu pledge signals crackdown on copyright thieves

0 CommentsPrint E-mail Xinhua, November 27, 2010
Adjust font size:

Chinese netizens enjoying free online reading might soon be paying for literary works as two pillars of China's Internet world appear to make up in a row over piracy.

On-line publisher Shanda Literature Corporation (SDL) is hoping that a pledge by search giant Baidu to resolve complaints that it "connives" in copyright violations could see an end to unauthorized copies.

Baidu has said it will introduce charges for on-line literature.

"We will make efforts to solve the copyright issue," Zhu Guang, a senior official of Baidu's market department, said Thursday at a ceremony to celebrate the first anniversary of Baidu's online library.

Zhu's remarks were welcomed by Shanda, which owns more than 80 percent of the country's on-line literary publications, as well as the seven leading original Chinese literature websites.

Its Qidian site, for example, charges VIP members 0.02 yuan per thousand words of popular e-books.

"Each of Qidian's 10 most popular original Internet novels is pirated 8 million times on average, meaning that if the cost of reading a novel is 1 yuan, the economic loss is 8 million yuan (1.2 million U.S. dollars)," Shanda CEO Hou Xiaoqiang told Xinhua.

More than 1.1 million authors had signed contracts to provide Shanda with original works, but pirated versions were commonly found among Baidu search results, he said.

"Baidu's connivance at net piracy leads to over a billion yuan of losses to our company every year," Hou said.

The losses to Shanda's contracted authors, who were paid according to reading fees, ran into millions of yuan.

A hotbed of theft

However, pirate websites could operate at only a fraction of the cost that Shanda invested in its services.

A website management specialist surnamed Jiao explained to Xinhua how website operators hired netizens to register as VIP users of official sites and then asked them to copy the content of popular novels.

If the official websites used technologies to prevent their works being copied, the pirates would just type out the content, said Jiao.

Pirate websites profited by charging lower reading fees than the official sites or just from advertising links.

Shanda said Baidu's "lenient" attitude to piracy had resulted in Baidu's online library becoming a hotbed of on-line copyright theft.

Baidu was also accused of profiting from advertising on pirate websites and by deliberately filtering out Shanda results.

Shanda filed a lawsuit against Baidu in March. The Luwan district court in Shanghai is assessing evidence from both sides, but no hearing date has been set.

China Written Works Copyright Society, China's sole literary copyright collective management organization, has backed Shanda, urging publishers and authors to join the lawsuit against Baidu.

1   2   Next  


Print E-mail Bookmark and Share

Go to Forum >>0 Comments

No comments.

Add your comments...

  • User Name Required
  • Your Comment
  • Racist, abusive and off-topic comments may be removed by the moderator.
Send your storiesGet more from China.org.cnMobileRSSNewsletter
主站蜘蛛池模板: 宁陕县| 昆山市| 阳城县| 泰和县| 广德县| 康马县| 贞丰县| 长沙市| 云阳县| 济阳县| 双城市| 馆陶县| 防城港市| 百色市| 咸宁市| 新源县| 永川市| 博兴县| 贞丰县| 丹巴县| 崇礼县| 新绛县| 凤城市| 衡山县| 铁岭县| 兴安盟| 邮箱| 麻阳| 鲁甸县| 深圳市| 阿鲁科尔沁旗| 绥江县| 新乡县| 五家渠市| 新营市| 木兰县| 宁远县| 奇台县| 保定市| 鸡西市| 额济纳旗|