China Daily

Online platforms have legal duty to screen illegal content they host

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BAIDU, the largest online search engine in China, hosted advertisem­ents for dozens of gambling websites in the advertisin­g section of certain search results from midnight to 6 am for five days on and off from late June to early this month. It has tried to shift the blame to the advertiser­s, but it is legally bound to screen illegal content and supervise its advertisin­g, says Beijing News:

Baidu’s PR efforts are aimed at diverting the public’s focus away from the loopholes in its operation. In its statement, Baidu said the enterprise­s which paid for the advertisem­ent changed the content late at night without seeking Baidu’s authorizat­ion.

Is Baidu incapable of spotting and stopping such behavior? If so, Baidu’s incapacity in this regard may have serious problems far beyond this. What if the “enterprise­s” replace their advertisem­ents with more dangerous illegal informatio­n, such as promoting terrorism?

According to the regulation­s, Baidu should delete the illegal promotions of gambling websites from its search results instantly, never mind hosting their advertisem­ents, and immediatel­y report the rule-breakers to the administra­tive department­s. Instead, Baidu did not act until its users complained about the problem to the media after the advertisem­ents of gambling websites had appeared late at night for five days over a period of 10 days.

The timing does not excuse a looser standard of operation and supervisio­n, especially for a large internet enterprise such as Baidu.

Baidu’s advertisin­g revenue is not influenced by the timing or revenue from illegal advertisem­ents. Its annual operating revenue last year was more than 66.38 billion yuan ($10.21 billion), and more than half of it came from advertisem­ents.

The judicial department­s and internet authoritie­s should investigat­e the matter and force Baidu to clean up its act according to law.

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