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Welcome to the Digital Marketing Inner Circle

This community attracts the best minds in the digital marketing industry. The aim of the 'Digital Marketing Inner Circle' is to discuss events, trends and technologies impacting our industry as well as provide a platform for sharing news and personal commentary for information related to online marketing, search, affiliate and social media marketing.

Another Exec Leaves Baidu- This Time it's the CTO PDF Print E-mail
Internet News
Written by Matt McDougall   
Monday, 18 January 2010 21:38

One week after the company's Chinese search engine website was apparently hacked, Baidu.com's chief technology officer has resigned. In a terse, two-sentence company statement, Baidu stated that Li Yinan is leaving the company for personal reasons, but the company did not state if the resignation will be effective immediately or if he has a replacement.

 

This follows another strangely terse company announcement only a week ago that Baidu's Chief Operating Officer, Ye Peng was leaving Baidu

 

"We appreciate all that Yinan has contributed to Baidu and we wish him every success in his future endeavors," stated Robin Li, Baidu's chairman and chief executive officer.

 

At 07:00 on January 12, 2010, Baidu.com experienced a massive failure and users in many cities and provinces in China said they were unable to visit the website (read more here). The search engine provider published an official announcement, stating that the reason for users' failure to access Baidu.com was attributed to illegal domain name tampering by its domain name registrar in the United States. However, other media reported that Baidu.com may have been attacked by Iranian hackers because some users saw a banner for the "Iranian Cyber Army" when they tried to access Baidu's homepage.

 

Also last week, in a message titled "A new approach to China" and posted on Google's official company blog, David Drummond, the chief legal officer and senior vice president for corporate development, said the company "detected a highly sophisticated and targeted attack on our corporate infrastructure originating from China that resulted in the theft of intellectual property from Google."

 

Rumors are swirling that Google may close its China operations.

 

Source: China Tech News


Matt McDougall Written on Monday, 18 January 2010 21:38 by Matt McDougall

Viewed 1563 times so far.

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Last Updated on Monday, 18 January 2010 21:51
 

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