In a bold move, the IFPI has announced that the organization is suing major search engine Baidu. A Chinese court has agreed to hear the $9 million USD lawsuit.Wikipedia describes Baidu as, "the leading Chinese search engine that can search websites, audio files, and images. It also has an online collaboratively-built encyclopedia (Baidu Baike), and a searchable keyword-based discussion forums. Baidu offers 57 search and community services. As of March 21, 2008, it is ranked nineteen in Alexa's internet rankings." The press release continues: Baidu’s music delivery services, which are quite separate from its general search engine, “deep link” users directly to hundreds of thousands of copyright infringing music tracks. They generate substantial advertising revenue for Baidu while causing massive damage to the music industry. In April 2007 a precedent-setting ruling found Yahoo China guilty of facilitating mass copyright infringement for operating a music delivery service very similar to Baidu’s. That ruling was confirmed in December 2007 by the Beijing Higher People’s Court, the final appeals court. A loss on the search engines behalf could mean bad news for other search engines that can be connected to in China. If merely linking to copyrighted music is an infringement, at least in China, it's doubtful that any other search engine would be safe from liability. An example of this is Google where a user last year showed how one could find music on the search engine: Clearly, this is a case that no search engine wants to lose anywhere in the world, but the good news for search engines is the fact that the company the IFPI is suing is a multi-million dollar company. |
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