China’s ‘Google’ Baidu Halts Bitcoin Ads, Leaves Market Guessing
China’s most popular search engine, Baidu, froze bitcoin ads Thursday in what Bloomberg suggests is a “growing wariness” on behalf of business and government. Baidu Mimicking Official Sentiment? Baidu has declined to comment on the move, but the ban has been confirmed by both Huobi and Okcoin, local Chinese exchanges. Since Thursday, speculation has....
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News has come in this morning that Baidu has banned bitcoin advertising on its website which handles almost all of China’s search inquiries. The action follows the tragic death of Wei Zexi, a college student with cancer who sought treatment from a hospital found through an online advertisement. Zexi stated in a post before his death that Baidu had mislead him to seek treatment from a hospital that had advertised a treatment researched in collaboration with Stanford. This turned out to be untrue, sending the Chinese internet on fire and bringing to surface seemingly long-held allegations of....
Chinese search engine Baidu has entered the financial revolution that is FinTech for the first time with an investment in an American Blockchain company. Circle Internet Financial Inc. was founded in 2013 by Jeremy Allaire and Sean Neville in Boston, Massachusetts and has an international operations headquarters in Dublin, Ireland. The Bitcoin startup announced it had raised $60 million in funding from a consortium which was led by IDG, an American based media, data and marketing services and venture capital organization. Participants included Baidu, Breyer Capital, General Catalyst....
Baidu Jiasule ("Baidu Accelerated"), a Cloudflare-like service offering a website firewall, protection against distributed denial of service attacks and other similar features, has started accepting bitcoins as payment. The Bitcoin payment option is currently manual, with the main site telling its users to contact a phone number if they need to pay with Bitcoin, but this is nevertheless the first instance of a major Chinese site accepting payments in Bitcoin. The news is particularly significant because of the connection to Baidu, a site which is often seen as a Chinese equivalent to....
China’s largest search engine, Baidu, has discreetly removed all bitcoin and virtual currency-related advertising from its online portals. China, the world’s largest market for bitcoin will no longer see bitcoin-related advertising on the country’s most-used search engine Baidu. The search engine giant moved to remove all cryptocurrency advertisements from its online portals this Thursday. Prominent Chinese exchanges OKCoin and Huobi confirmed the ban to Bloomberg, which claimed that the move was a reaction to the growing number of cryptocurrency-related Ponzi schemes and scams in the....
Baidu, China’s largest search engine and web services company, has recently halted all Bitcoin and cryptocurrency-related advertising on its network. CnLedger, a Chinese media network which recently received a grant from the National Natural Science Foundation of China earlier this week, broke the news on August 25, 2016. While many Bitcoin online forums and communities somewhat expected a government pressured company like Baidu to set a negative precedent for Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies, the announcement of Baidu is quite ironic considering the fact that the internet giant invested in....