Special report: 2008 Olympic Games¡¡
BEIJING, July 16 -- Three leading Chinese dot-com firms
have won the right to broadcast events of the 2008 Olympic Games, competing with
Sohu.com, a sponsor and original holder of the rights, it was announced in
Beijing yesterday.
The announcement was another move in the heated
battle in the Chinese Internet industry before the Games open next month.
The Olympics are bringing huge business opportunities
and the potential for surging advertising income for online firms, industry
insiders said.
Nasdaq-listed NetEase.com and Sina Corp as well as
Hong Kong-listed Tencent (QQ) said they signed with CCTV.com to get the rights
to video broadcast the Olympics and to offer video on demand services online.
PPLive.com also obtained the rights from CCTV to
broadcast Beijing Olympics content through its Websites, the second online
peer-to-peer video sharing platform after PPS' partnership with cctv.com, its
operator Shanghai Synacast Media Tech Co announced yesterday.
PPLive, which has over 100 million registered users
worldwide according to an AC Nielson survey, was ranked first of all Chinese P2P
platforms for user scale and exclusiveness, iResearch said in its latest report.
CCTV will use eight channels to broadcast the
Olympics with 3,800 hours of television from August 8 to 24, Wang Wenbin,
general manager of CCTV.com, said.
The chief executives of the flagship firms, including
NetEase's William Ding, Tencent's Ma Huateng and Sina's Charles Chao, declined
to reveal financial details yesterday.
"The new media broadcasts of the Olympics, the first
time in the history of the global event, will allow even more people access to
the event," Wang said.
Along with Sohu, almost all top Chinese Websites have
the rights to broadcast the Olympics.
"It's the first time the Internet has become the No.
1 distribution channel of the Olympics over CCTV (in China). For most
advertisers, the Internet is the major battle field of Olympics promotions,"
DCCI said in a report released yesterday.
Advantages
Advantages of the Internet platform include immediacy
and interactive content, according to the DCCI (Data Center of the China
Internet), an Internet market monitor and data analysis platform.
By the end of the first half of the year, China's
online population reached 221 million and is expected to hit 263 million by the
end of this year.
In the first six months, Chinese netizens spent 256.7
billion yuan (37.1 billion U.S.dollars) on-line, a 58.2-percent growth
year-on-year, and the whole-year figure will surpass 587.4 billion yuan,
according to DCCI.
The major online players in the Chinese dot-com
industry will benefit from the Olympics.
Sina.com and Sohu.com, the country's top Internet
portals, have generated strong advertising?sales with a quarterly growth rate
from 18 to 30 percent above previous quarters.
(Source: China Daily)