Baidu sacks four employees for deleting user content in exchange for cash

In a country where the censorship rates are pretty high and where journalists have been imprisoned for writing articles that speak out against the government, it seems ironic that China’s largest search engine, Baidu, has recently fired four members of their staff for reportedly deleting user content in exchange for cash. As we’re sure that some of you guys are aware by now, there are blogs out there that do reviews for gadgets (like us), food, travel destinations, services and etc. Some of these reviews are sponsored which means that the content is usually biased, while some reviews are done simply because the blog wanted to give a fair and unbiased opinion. Unfortunately this can result in bad reviews for certain restaurants or businesses who might have provided unfavorable services or products.

Dubbed “professional post-deleting”, this basically deletes blog posts and user content that might have been construed as negative by the company that was written about. Thanks to cross-referencing, Baidu has managed to uncover the employees who did the deletions and has fired them. So how much does this “professional post-deleting” service cost? According to The Global Times, a forum post can be deleted for $150, $450 for a news story and fees can go as high as $30,000 a year for a “maintenance service” whereby negative posts are deleted immediately upon sighting.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Apple and Baidu expected to share advertising revenue from searches made on the iPhone, Apple expected to announce Baidu iOS integration next week,

Staff of China’s Biggest Search Engine Delete User Content For Cash [Internet]

The Wall Street Journal is reporting that Baidu, China’s biggest search company, is sacking staff because they’ve been deleting users’ posts for cash. More »

Apple unveils Safari 6: goes well with your new Mountain Lion (update: Windows version absent)

Apple unveils Safari 6 goes well with your new Mountain Lion

Apple’s web browser has joined its latest OS, and joins the dots on a raft of new features that we’ve been promised for a while. These include iCloud tabs and a new tab view — both Mountain Lion only — alongside a new smart search and unified search (with support for Chinese search giant Baidu) and address bar. If your older OS is missing out on those iCloud tabs, there’s some other good news, Reading Lists will now work without being online — which all sounds very in-flight friendly. There’s also a Do Not Track option to cover your internet tracks, but for all the minute detail on some new developer additions, we’d advise hitting the source below.

Update 1: We’re not spotting a Windows release yet — and nor can we see whether it will work on Snow Leopard. Let us know in the comments if you manage to grab the latest iteration. For anyone on Lion, the update will be available from the Mac App Store.

Update 2: The latest version may not arrive on Windows — with all references to the old version now gone from Apple’s site. As 9to5Mac notes, nightly WebKit builds are still out there if you have a sudden pang for Safari. We’ve reached out to Apple to confirm.

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Apple unveils Safari 6: goes well with your new Mountain Lion (update: Windows version absent) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 Jul 2012 09:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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