Tag Archives: Mark Zuckerberg

INTERNET: Facebook Makes Name in China with Trademark Win

Bottom line: A favorable court ruling in a trademark dispute is the latest positive step for Facebook in China, and reinforces a view that it could get permission to open a Chinese service within the next year.

Facebook wins trademark ruling in Beijing

Social networking giant Facebook (Nasdaq: FB) may be absent on the China Internet, but a new victory in a local trademark dispute shows its name is gaining traction in the Chinese legal system. Some are pointing out that Facebook’s victory against a beverage maker that tried to register its trademark contrasts sharply with the loss in a similar case last week for US smartphone giant Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL). (previous post)

While both decisions came from courts in Beijing, it’s probably a bit unfair to compare the 2 since each has to be considered based on individual facts and evidence. But this latest trademark victory does appear to show that Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg’s strategy of currying favor with Beijing may be producing results, as he pursues his ultimate goal of launching a Chinese version of his social networking service (SNS). Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Google Serenades Beijing With Entrepreneur Event

Bottom line: Google’s event to promote entrepreneurs in China is its latest effort to curry favor with Beijing, and could help it win permission to open a local version of its Google Play app store by year-end.

Google supports China entrepreneurs

Internet giant Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) is quickly joining Facebook (Nasdaq: FB) as one of China’s biggest fans, as it looks to re-enter the world’s largest online market with a launch of its app store and possibly its Nexus smartphones. Less than a month after its AlphaGo computer wowed Chinese audiences by beating a world champion at the ancient board game of Go, Google’s China chief has just wrapped up a major local event aimed at helping the country’s legions of budding entrepreneurs.

Anyhow who lives in China knows that words like “entrepreneur” and “creativity” have become buzzwords from Beijing and local governments, which are desperately trying to boost the private sector to offset numerous problems in the big state-run establishment. Google’s event looks highly designed to play to that campaign and curry favor with central leaders as part of its broader ambitions to re-enter the market. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Baidu Talks De-Listing, Qihoo Chief Naps at Internet Pow-wow

Bottom line: China’s global Internet conference this week was mostly empty pageantry, but it did reveal that Baidu might like to privatize from New York one day, and attracted a handful of China-friendly global executives.

Wuzhen Internet pow-wow mostly empty talk
Wuzhen Internet pow-wow mostly empty talk

China’s big Internet pow-wow this week in the picturesque town of Wuzhen hasn’t produced much news despite its big aspirations, reflecting Beijing’s tight control over cyberspace and companies that do business there. But the globally-minded event did produce at least one interesting tidbit on the recent privatization wave by US-listed Chinese companies, and also an entertaining photo of 2 top executives that went viral online.

The news item came from Robin Li, founder of leading Chinese search engine Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), who hinted that he hopes to someday join the recent wave of Chinese companies now privatizing from New York due to undervaluation. The photo that went viral captured a humorous moment involving a catnap during the conference by Zhou Hongyi, the controversial and more often outspoken CEO of security software specialist Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU). Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Big Local Names, No Substance at Internet Pow-Wow

Bottom line: The lack of news or attendance by major worldwide executives at China’s global Internet conference this week shows the country’s Internet remains relatively closed and under strict government control.

Global Internet pow-wow takes place in Wuzhen
Global Internet pow-wow takes place in scenic Wuzhen

I had big hopes for the second edition of China’s World Internet Conference happening this week in the picturesque town of Wuzhen, as all of the country’s top executives are in attendance at an event intended to showcase the country’s online prowess. The list of domestic executives in attendance certainly hasn’t disappointed, and many are undoubtedly there to network with China’s top Internet bureaucrats and President Xi Jinping, who gave this year’s opening speech.

But a look at some of the comments from names like Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) founder Jack Ma and Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) founder Robin Li turns up mostly empty talk, mixed with the expected self-promotion. What’s more, I also find the near-absence of any major foreign names from the conference somewhat puzzling, since China is trying to bill this as a global conference. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Zuckerberg, Sandberg Keep Up Facebook China Press

Bottom line: Mark Zuckerberg’s meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping and new China-related remarks by Sheryl Sandberg show Facebook is closing in on a goal of launching its signature service in China, with a breakthrough possible as soon as next year.

Facebook thrives on China ad sales

Despite being blocked in the world’s largest Internet market, social networking (SNS) giant Facebook (Nasdaq: FB) is using every opportunity to quietly remind the world that it’s determined to include China in its global footprint. Just a week after company founder Mark Zuckerberg met with Chinese President Xi Jinping at a high-profile event in Seattle, his chief deputy Sheryl Sandberg was quoted at an event in New York talking up the big business Facebook is already doing in China.

Company watchers will know that Facebook quietly opened a China office in Beijing last year, with an aim to courting local advertisers seeking to reach the company’s global audience of 1.5 billion users. That business is doing quite well, according to Sandberg, though the Facebook’s ultimate China goal is still its eventual entry into a domestic Internet market that boasts nearly 700 million web surfers. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: China Reaches Out To Facebook In Growing Courtship

Bottom line: The visit by a top Chinese Internet official to Facebook’s US campus shows Mark Zuckerberg’s charm offensive toward China is producing results, which could see his company finally get permission to enter the market next year.

China Internet official Lu visits Facebook campus

I have to commend Mark Zuckerberg for his tenacity, after the Facebook (Nasdaq: FB) founder once again made headlines for receiving a visit from a top Chinese Internet official visiting the US. There are several interesting things about this latest development involving Zuckerberg’s endless quest to bring Facebook to China, beginning with the source of this latest news.

It turns out the news didn’t come from Facebook or even ordinary people who caught a glimpse of the meeting, but rather it came from the web page China.com.cn, an official government site under the State Council. (Chinese article) What’s more, the account was rather detailed and upbeat, and featured several photos of Zuckerberg chatting happily on the Facebook campus with Lu Wei, minister of the Cyberspace Administration of China. Read Full Post…

Facebook’s Zuckerberg Seeks China Entree At Tsinghua

Facebook’s Zuckerberg visits China

I previously wrote that Apple’s (Nasdaq: AAPL) plain-spoken CEO Tim Cook should consider buying a second home in China due to his frequent visits to the country, and the same could be said for Facebook’s (Nasdaq: FB) more brash founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg. While Cook’s frequent visits are quite official and include many stops at government and company offices, Zuckerberg has been far more low-key in his equally regular visits due to Facebook’s lack of official presence in the country where its website is formally blocked. But Zuckerberg wants desperately to find a way to enter the market, which explains his latest low-key appearance at an event this week in Beijing at Tsinghua University, China’s equivalent of MIT. Read Full Post…

New Microsoft Chief Sets Sail For China

New Microsoft CEO Nadella to visit China

It’s become a sort of rite of passage for CEOs of major tech firms to visit China after moving into their job, which looks set to happen again with a September trip to Beijing set for Microsoft’s (Nasdaq: MSFT) new top executive Satya Nadella. Tim Cook traveled to China just 6 months after taking the reins from Steve Jobs as Apple’s (Nasdaq: AAPL) CEO in 2011, and has visited the country several times since then. Even Twitter’s (NYSE: TWTR) CEO Dick Costolo visited Shanghai earlier this year, just months after the social networking giant’s New York IPO, despite saying earlier that China wasn’t a market where his company could do business. (previous post) Read Full Post…