Baidu Inc (百度), which operates China’s leading search engine, said yesterday it had removed 2.8 million items from an online library after authors complained it was distributing their work without permission.
The company apologized last weekend to Chinese authors and said it would screen material on Baidu Library and remove unauthorized work.
Baidu removed 2.8 million items from the document-sharing service’s “literary works” section, company spokesman Kaiser Kuo (郭怡廣) said.
Kuo said that left about 1,000 works it believes are properly licensed.
Baidu hopes to discuss with authors possible arrangements to distribute their work and share the revenues, Kuo said.
“We really hope our actions will go far to assuage them and will form a foundation for us to have fruitful talks about ways to cooperate,” he said.
Baidu has faced complaints by music companies, publishers and others that it facilitates the distribution of unlicensed material by linking to pirate Web sites that carry unauthorized copies.
This month, the US Trade Representative’s office cited Baidu in a list of 33 Web sites or public markets in China, Russia, India and other countries that it deemed “notorious markets” linked to sales of pirated or fake goods.
The latest dispute came after Baidu launched a series of new services last year that are meant to create a distinctive identity for a company long seen as an imitator of search giant Google Inc.
In a petition posted on the Internet on March 15, a group of Chinese authors complained that Baidu had “deteriorated into a burglar company that stole our property and stole our rights.”
The dispute prompted Baidu chief executive Robin Li (李彥宏) to announce at an Internet conference this week in Shenzhen that he would shut down the service if it could not be resolved, Kuo said.
“We appealed [to] Baidu to curb and correct their infringing activities. If they did so, we welcome it,” said Yang Chengzhi (楊承志), Chinese Communist Party secretary of the China Writers’ Association.
Baidu has more than 75 percent of China’s search market, with Google in second place at less than 20 percent. Google’s share has eroded since it closed its China-based search engine in March last year over censorship issues.
Baidu says it will launch a system in May to screen material on Baidu Library and block the uploading of copyrighted works.
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