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China’s Alibaba takes aim at Baidu in Internet search

/ 12 September, 2011

Alibaba Group entered the search engine business so that China’s leading search engine, Baidu, wouldn’t sleep well, Alibaba CEO Jack Ma said buy generic viagra online recently.

“If Baidu sleeps well then China’s Internet users won’t sleep well,” Ma said at the company’s annual Alifest this weekend.

Alibaba, best known for its Chinese e-commerce websites, launched a beta version of its new search engine last year called eTao.com. This put the company in competition with Baidu, which dominates China’s search engine market with an 80% user market share, according to CNZZ.com, an Internet analytics web site.

Ma’s comment was one of the first times Alibaba has publicly spoken about its intentions for eTao. In June, eTao was made into its own company under viagra pharmacy online Alibaba Group.

Following Ma’s comment, Baidu spokesman Kaiser Kuo said the company never obsesses with what its rivals are doing, but instead obsesses with what its usesr want. “As long as we are able to deliver that, we will sleep just fine,” he said.

Both Alibaba and Baidu are the leaders in generic viagra online canadian pharmacy their respective markets. But even as Alibaba dominates China’s e-commerce scene, many of the country’s Internet users rely on Baidu to search for products online, according Love this product, take the stronger one if you have erectile dysfunction. Is something similar to cialis for women - high quality of the medications we offer is the subject of our primary concern. to analysts.

Alibaba’s eTao site has been designed primarily as a shopping search engine, allowing users to query for products and group-buying deals. But the site also allows users to search for general web pages as well. eTao’s market share, however, is so small that research firms don’t list it.

Alibaba’s eTao site launched months after Google decided to shut down its search engine for mainland China last year, a move that allowed Baidu to expand its market share to the point it has a near monopoly. Last month, the company faced criticism from a Chinese state-run television network in what analysts said was an effort by authorities to regulate the search giant.