Take any news China related (like Russia related) with a very large grain of salt.
“The Internet’s center of gravity is shifting toward China, said Duncan Clark, chairman of BDA China in Beijing, a technology consultant.”
This is one of the more ridiculous things I've read recently. China is not the center of the internet. And the only technology they have is either bought or stolen.
One barrier was created with the express intent of being a barrier.
The other is a tool for improving communication between people that developed separately from other similar tools, and is pretty much equivalent to a different API.
I don't think they're comparable. Unless China decides to ban export of all chinese-language media, and import of all non-chinese media.
"Sales from online advertising reached 20.7 billion yuan ($3.1 billion) last year, according to data from Beijing-based iResearch Inc. By comparison, ZenithOptimedia estimates U.S. Internet advertisements in 2009 were valued at $54.2 billion."
Seems like burying the lead to me. I don't think you can say Chinese web sites are surpassing U.S. ones as a business until the revenues are comparable. Otherwise, it's more like bit torrent or the Pirate Bay. They may be surpassing YouTube and Hulu in downloads, but that doesn't mean there is a superior business model behind it.
Also, the ebay alternative does not charge any fees, it only gets it money from ads. They do this, according to the article, because Chinese prefer it that way. If it is true for other services, then China is more ad driven than other countries, so it should be even higher than normal.
I think the article starts off badly, its YouTube vs Hulu comparison generates quite a bit of negative sentiments.
Every country has its own policies, it is quite tough for outsiders to intervene or change things around. Think Cambodia, Vietnam. In Chin'a case, it's the government's case to require Web content to be censored. That's how it is, think of it as cultural difference or the rules of the game if you want to play.
The opportunities to grow in developing countries are great, it is just the process to come in, understand how the local does things and how can we adapt our policies to make it work that matters. A few other countries that offer similar growth opportunities less the restrictions are Malaysia and Indonesia. (just look at the Jakarta Composite and KLSE Composite index)
@benhedrington doing something involving libraries in beijing. we're in stealth mode ish.
youku and tudou and all the other youtube-likes are essentially unusable in the US. partially intentional to avoid copyright trouble for the companies involved, however they have set up servers abroad to cater to countries with large overseas-chinese populations.
My impression is that this is a recent thing. I remember about one year ago youku & tudou were very 'copyright-friendly'. PPStream is still quite good, but it uses a windows-only client.
I think it does not make sense to compare USA with China. It rather see english vs chinese, because the language barrier is bigger than the national barrier for a service like Youtube. The english speaking world is much bigger than the USA alone.
The most interesting consequence of operating in china is simply the massive scaling ability required of even the simplest of websites. I expect some interesting technologies to come out of china in the next few years because of this.
I run a business in China. To run a business targeting Chinese consumers, you need to be based inside China.
I often see people ask American-based startups: "Why don't you offer Chinese support and try to grab the Chinese market?" It's really not that simple. Even for an existing startup, successfully entering the Chinese market basically requires you to run a totally new business. If you don't treat the Chinese branch like its own indigenous company, you won't get anywhere. I think Google is an excellent example of a company that failed, or refused, to understand this.
I wouldn't write off google china quite yet? They still have a huge office here churning out tons of code, making interesting things, kicking ass with android stuff..
Yep (although I'm back in Canada for a while now). maxklein is also doing his startup in China.
IMO, Youku's most obvious competitive advantage is that they undergo almost no pressure from copyright holders. There are tons of full movies available on Youku and I highly doubt they have licensing partnership like Hulu does.
I'm one of them. The weakness of yuku is most of the videos are uploaded by the website itself, not the user generated content. The reasons behind it is quite complicated...
China is a complicated place to be in. Think of it this way, like USA, its people and government value patriotism. But in China the government prefer(enforce) patriotism without the (any)freedom of speech.
“The Internet’s center of gravity is shifting toward China, said Duncan Clark, chairman of BDA China in Beijing, a technology consultant.”
This is one of the more ridiculous things I've read recently. China is not the center of the internet. And the only technology they have is either bought or stolen.