Listen Live
WERE AM Mobile App 2020

LISTEN LIVE. LIKE US ON FACEBOOK. FOLLOW US ON TWITTER

News Talk Cleveland Featured Video
CLOSE

 

Since the government began squeezing Western operators like Google, more domestic outfits have stepped in.

by Isaac Stone Fish

At the end of 2009, Google enjoyed a spot as the promising, second-largest player in China’s burgeoning online search industry. The Internet at that time lacked competition from government companies, which in China’s state-dominated business landscape was “extremely rare,” Tucker Grinnan, head of Asian telecommunications research at HSBC in Hong Kong, told NEWSWEEK at the time.

What a difference a year makes. Since Google’s high-profile spat with the Chinese government and subsequent retreat to Hong Kong, the search-engine market in China has further opened to domestic companies. Baidu has strengthened its lead and now controls 73 percent of the market, up from 68 percent in the first quarter. (Google’s share has shrunk to 22 percent.) And Web giant Alibaba recently tested a beta version of a search site it is working on with Microsoft’s Bing. Two of the most surprising contenders: People’s Daily and Xinhua, media arms of the Communist Party. The People’s Search Engine at Goso.cn was launched in June, and in August Xinhua announced a collaboration with China Mobile to develop its own search-engine property.

Search is not the only online sector targeted by China’s state business empire. A subsidy of the State Post Bureau launched a B2C Web site that offers a wide variety of goods for sale and options to pay water and electricity bills online  for customers in wealthy Jiangsu province. Last month, the State Bureau of Surveying and Mapping launched the beta version of a site called Map World that’s seemingly intended to compete with Google Maps, which still lacks an online map license in China. Earlier this year, as micro-blogging grew in popularity locally, People’s Daily released an updated version of The People’s Microblog, which features tweeting government officials. China’s state television provider, CCTV, has been moving into online video and broadcasting as well. “There’s been a huge shift on the government’s side over this past year,” says Thomas Crampton, Asia-Pacific director of digital influence at Ogilvy, “in that there has been a huge amount of government investment in the Internet.”

These sites, and the investment they’ve received, imply that the government realizes that the online sphere is here to stay and that the strategy of banning or censoring uppity foreign and domestic companies works best when the government can provide an alternative. Whether there’s any market for ideological content is still too early to say; with the exception of online video, none of the government’s new Web properties has more than a trifling market share “but I wouldn’t write them off,” says Crampton.

While there are no available statistics on the market size of China’s state-owned Web sites and representatives from People’s Daily and Map World couldn’t be reached for comment, the situation “is getting better and better” for state-owned Web sites, says Fang Xingdong, an Internet entrepreneur who founded what was formerly one of the biggest blogging sites in China. People’s Daily appointed Olympic gold medalist and Cambridge economics Ph.D. Deng Yaping as president of Goso.cn and Goso.cn is backed by influential, state-owned media organizations like the China Film Group.

Read More

Story Compliments Of Newsweek