China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Baidu CEO nominated to be academicia­n; protest follows

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@chinadaily.com.cn

Baidu CEO Robin Li Yanhong’s recent nomination for the country’s highest academic title in engineerin­g has triggered heated debate, with some netizens claiming Li was unqualifie­d because of his search engine’s insufficie­nt regulation of fraudulent medical advertisin­g.

Li was one of 531 candidates, including 114 entreprene­urs, who might become academicia­ns of the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g at the end of the year, according to a statement released by the academy on April 30.

Other nominees include e-commerce giant Alibaba’s technology chief Wang Jian, carmaker BYD founder Wang Chuanfu, and Microsoft computer engineer Harry Shum. The candidates will be subject to a strict selection process, and only around 10 to 15 percent of them will be granted the prestigiou­s title.

Expertswwi­lill maakkeetth­eeiirr choiices,, but some netizens in an anonymous WeChat poll opposed Lii’’s nomination. More than 150,,000 netizen in the poll voted no, with around 1,000 voting for his nomination as of May 2. The poll was removed on Monday. Neither the academy nor Baidu responded to inquiries.

Li was nominated by the China Associatio­n for Science and Technology mainly for his contributi­on to China’s search engine technology, financial news outlet Yicai reported on Monday. Li also was included in the candidate category known for its inclusion of innovative managers in new and interdisci­plinary engineerin­g sectors.

Zhou Jian, chairman of Beijing Gan’en Charity Foundation, said in a recent WeChat article that people should “resolutely oppose Li’s nomination for academicia­n”, claiming Baidu has promoted fake medical advertisem­ents in its search results that misled patients.

A purported doctor who goes by the alias Dahancheng­xiang recently wrote a WeChat article saying he often encountere­d patients who fell for the fake advertisem­ents, wasted money and treatment time and thus missed the opportunit­y to be cured.

The netizen also strongly opposed Li’s nomination shortly after the announceme­nt, saying in an article that Li was morally unqualifie­d because of Baidu’s insufficie­nt regulation of advertisin­g. The article went viral on social media but was removed over complains of libel by Baidu.

Li would not be the first controvers­ial engineer to become an academicia­n, which carries perks such as stipends and medical services. In 2011, the public was outraged when Xie Jianping, a chemical engineer who created less harmful tobacco products, became an academicia­n of the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g.

Baidu came under fire in 2016 when Wei Zexi, a 21-year-old student from Xidian University in Shaanxi province, died from a rare cancer of the soft tissue. Wei was researchin­g the disease on Baidu and came across an advertisem­ent for treatments that proved ineffectiv­e.

After Wei’s death, Baidu announced a sweeping restructur­ing and optimizati­on of its medical business, especially regarding its paid listing practices. It also tightened regulation­s on medical promotion and enforced clear labeling rules that differenti­ate advertisem­ents from credible medical informatio­n, according to media reports.

However, medical advertisin­g remains one of the key sources of income for Baidu, and some are still trying to exploit the system. In April, the police in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, detained a team of medical fraudsters who drove up rankings on Baidu’s research results to promote faulty hospitals to patients, local authoritie­s said.

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