BEIJING, Nov. 28 (Xinhua) -- China's Nasdaq-listed
Internet giant, Baidu, announced an overhaul plan on Friday after it was accused
of letting unlicensed medical products suppliers buy higher rankings.
"We have removed the key words of all four clients
mentioned inthe [China Central Television] report and have begun to double-check
the licenses of all other hospitals and pharmacies on our client list," said
Baidu chief excecutive officer Li Yanhong, also known as Robin Li.
In an exclusive interview with Xinhua, Li said his
company would take all unlicensed suppliers off its ranking.
"Baidu employees who are found to have been involved
in the scandal will be penalized ... We have already fired people who helped
fabricate documents for unlicensed suppliers," he said, without elaborating.
Li said Baidu would launch a new ad system as soon as
possible to give more precise information to Internet browsers. The new system,
"Phoenix Nest", was intended to better correlate and rank search results, he
added.
CCCTV reported on Nov. 15 that several patients
visited hospitals or tried medicines that got high ranks in Baidu searches,
often spending huge sums for ineffective treatments.
A Beijinger surnamed Li complained to CCTV he spent
more than 10,000 yuan (1,430 U.S. dollars) at a top-ranking clinic listed at
Baidu, but his lower abdominal pain persisted. He said he was later cured at the
People's Hospital, one of the leading hospitals in Beijing, for just 100 yuan.
CCTV said the unlicensed clinic paid Baidu 16.56 yuan
per click to get the top rank.
Baidu.com receives more than 100 million clicks
daily.
Baidu employs 7,000 people and accounts for about 70
percent of China's search engine market. The scandal has driven its shares to a
two-year low.
Baidu aims high for own on-line shopping website
SHANGHAI, Oct. 30 (Xinhua) -- Baidu.com Inc., China's leading Internet search engine, has launched its own online shopping website and aimed to make it the largest of its kind in the country within three years.
The website youa.baidu.com recorded more than four million pageviews, while 1.99 million items of goods went on sale on it on Tuesday, when the consumer-to-consumer (C2C) website was launched, the company said on Thursday. Full story
Robin Li portrays the would-be top man of Baidu Japan
BEIJING, Jan. 29 (Xinhua) -- Robin Li, the founder and CEO of Baidu.com, portrayed on Tuesday the would-be top man of Baidu Japan as appealing to people, young and versed in grasping new things and making decisions. But first of all, he must be a Japanese.
"Baidu is a consumer-oriented company. The president must be local, so that he can face the Japanese market directly. I hope people would say, 'The guy is amicable'," said Li. Full story