Chinese Internet giant Qihoo 360′s three-fold plan to challenge Tencent and Baidu [Interview] – The Next WebBaidu challenger Qihoo has captured 10 percent of the search market share in China, aiming for 40 percent by 2015.
Alibaba Reboots Its Cloud-based Mobile OS Strategy – AlizilaCompany outlines new plans seven months after Google blocked a smartphone featuring Alibaba's OS software in China. Percent of Time Spent Online is on Social Networking – Experian...
Google's new Asia-Pacific chief, Karim Temsamani discusses growth opportunities, challenges, monetizing mobile growth, Google+, and China. Google's Eric Schmidt warns of 'dangerous period for the internet' in Burma – The Verge
If YouTube were a country, it would be the third largest in the world after China and India. This generation is defined by the Internet, mobile, and social – consuming content when and where they want.
China, where Facebook remains officially banned, represents one obvious stumbling block in Facebook's quest for complete worldwide domination, while VKontakte and Odnoklassniki remain popular in Russia.
China search giant Baidu was second globally with 14.5 billion (8.2 percent), and Yahoo came in third with 8.63 billion (4.9 percent). The following eMarketer graph shows the comparative growth of Internet user penetration in Russia:
Google had been offering users a warning if they searched for terms including "Freedom", and whenever someone in China had made such a move would tell them that their Internet connection could be interrupted.
With the Internet itself not expected to reach a majority of China's vast population until 2015, Qzone may even be able to overhaul Facebook's active user figures without having to expand very much outside Chinese borders.
Many commentators have predicted that mobile search will overtake desktop by 2015 and in some countries, including China and India, this is already the case. Mobile Internet is on the rise all over the world.
Wired posted a story yesterday about how a small riot following the World Series win for the San Francisco Giants sparked what, in China, would be known as a 'human flesh search' for one of the rioters.
Tencent's Qzone claims to have almost half a billion members itself in China – an obvious stumbling block in Facebook's quest for complete worldwide dominance. Swedish social media entrepreneur Erik Wachtmeister recently announced the launch of a...
Just a little background for you, Qihoo 360 Technology Co.is a Chinese security software company that created a very popular browser in China with almost 300 million users, falling just second behind Internet Explorer.
China's own data, meanwhile, suggests it has the largest mobile web community in the world, with almost half of users regularly searching on the go. The incidence of mobile search is also high in other developing markets, including the other...
Seznam is not far behind Google within the Czech Republic and China still represents a huge stumbling block in Google's quest for complete world dominance. Baidu is the most popular search engine in China and is currently the fifth most visited...
Japan leads the region with 147 searches per searcher, but China – still very much a developing market in this regard – drags down the regional average with just 68 searches per searcher. Social media may get most of the news clippings lately, but...
Baidu is the market leader in China for example, and effective SEO varies between Baidu and Google in several important ways: In China (where both Facebook and Twitter are officially banned), Qzone rules the roost while VK (formerly Vkontakte) has...
In Russia, for example, Yandex has the greatest market share while Baidu – the fifth most visited site in the world according to Alexa – is massively important in China. A recent study conducted across the European Union found that more than half...
This address isn’t accessible outside of China due to a ISP network filter (not government related), which is in the process of being removed. In the meantime, for people interested in testing this connection from outside China, he recommended...
It’s quite simple - Harbour bought article spinning services from a company in China. In analyzing Harbour’s own link building strategies I was reminded of the time Eric Schmidt famously called the internet "a cesspool".
Baidu is China’s No.search engine, and in terms of second tier they are only second tier here in the U.S. This includes tool bar searches, Internet yellow pages (IYPs), parked domains and many other networks.