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China ICT (Info Communications Technology) Industry, Infra, Commerce, Exports: News & Discussions

Baidu sues Tencent, Sohu for reputation infringement
2016-08-19 20:20:09 Xinhua Web Editor: Huang Yue


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Undated photo shows Baidu Waimai's delivery men. [Photo: 163.com]

Chinese search giant Baidu is suing internet juggernauts Tencent and Sohu for reputation infringement.

The operators of Baidu Waimai, a takeout service under Baidu, have filed lawsuits against Tencent and Sohu for posting articles infringing on the reputation of its takeout service, according to a Friday statement by the Beijing Haidian District People's Court, which has accepted the cases.

Baidu Waimai complained that some public accounts on Tencent's messaging service WeChat posted stories about employees of Baidu-owned restaurants using toilet water to wash food. Stories on Sohu's platform also claimed that Baidu Waimai's restaurants used expired food.

The company said the stories are completely untrue and have badly hurt Baidu Waimai's reputation and credit. It demanded Tencent and Sohu shut down the public accounts and provide information about the account operators. It also filed a lawsuit against an e-commerce company that posted an untrue story about Baidu Waimai on WeChat, demanding the closing of its WeChat account, a public apology and compensation of 500,000 yuan (75,000 U.S. dollars).
 
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By scraping the domestic roaming fees, the mobile internet (smartphone) industry will be a big winner.
More growth for the mobile industry and ecommerce.


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China's telecom operators to scrap domestic roaming fees amid restructuring
2016-08-21 00:43:24 Xinhua Web Editor: Min Rui

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China's major telecom operators have announced plans to cancel domestic roaming charges as they are instead turning to 4G services as a major source of profit.

China Mobile Communications Corp, the country's largest telecom operator, recently said they will stop charging domestic roaming fees by the end of this year.

Since July, they have stopped selling new service packages that include domestic roaming charges on cross-province phone calls.

Mobile users are currently charged 0.6 yuan (9 cents) to 0.8 yuan per minute for the roaming service under different payment schemes.

This nearly doubles costs for subscribers, which angers consumers. Industry regulators have also urged operators to gradually abolish fees.

With 4G services developing rapidly, China's major telecom operators saw their net profit grow at remarkable pace in the first half of this year thanks to fast growth in 4G subscribers.

In July, China Telecommunications Corp, China's third largest mobile telecommunication provider, announced it will cancel roaming fees this year. On Thursday, China Unicom, another telecom heavyweight, said it will scrap such fees from October.

Analysts said that eliminating roaming fees will not incur big losses for operators, as the data flow business has become a major source of profit for them.
 
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China launches first Tibetan-language search engine
August 23, 2016

Developers launched China's first Tibetan-language search engine on Monday in Northwest China's Qinghai Province.

The search engine (yongzin.com) will serve as a unified portal for all major Tibetan-language websites in China, said Tselo, director of the Tibetan Language Work Committee of the Hainan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in Qinghai.

Yongzin means "master" or "teacher" in the Tibetan language.

It will also be a major global source for information in Tibetan online, he said.

The search engine has eight sections for news, websites, images, videos, music, encyclopedia, literature and forums.

"The search engine will meet the growing needs of the Tibetan-speaking population and facilitate the building of Tibetan digital archives and the expansion of databases in the Tibetan language," he said.

The project, which costs 57 million yuan (about $8.7 million), is supported by the government. Work began on the project in April 2013.

More than 150 people were hired for the project, said Dora, technical director of the search engine and a professor with the Digitization Institute of Tibetan Literature of Northwest University for Nationalities.

People of Tibetan ethnicity make up 80 percent of the team, said Dora.

"Popular search engines such as Yahoo and Google enable searches in Tibetan, but they mainly support searching with single characters," he said.

Yongzin.com enables searches using words and phrases to yield more accurate results, he said.

Yongzin also leads to more web resources than its competitors, said Dora. "For example, the news function leads to more than 200 domestic Tibetan-language websites in China," he said.

It is expected to gain around 1.2 million users in its initial stage, Dora said.

Contents are also categorized according to different local dialects such as Amdo, Kamba and U-Tsang, he added.
 
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China has 710 million netizens, more than 20 million under 10 years old
2016-08-26 11:26 | Ecns.cn | Editor: Mo Hong'e


(ECNS) -- China had 710 million netizens at the end of June, among whom 23 percent were under 19 years old, with more than 20.59 million under the age of 10, according to the latest data from the China Internet Network Information Center (CNNIC).

The number of children surfing the Internet saw a slight increase compared to data released at the end of last year, indicating that the Internet continued to penetrate into lower-age groups.

Parents, content providers, game producers, schools and regulators are suggested to make concerted efforts to protect children from potential physical and mental harm that may result from surfing the Internet.

Experts have proposed an Internet grading system to protect children in China. A previous survey also showed that 72.4 percent of those interviewed supported an Internet grading system.
 
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New Alibaba book chronicles rise of China's Internet, private sector and its largest e-commerce company

2016-08-25 16:17XinhuaEditor: Mo Hong'e

At first glance, little may set Duncan Clark apart from other foreign business executives in Beijing's CBD, with his dapper appearance and Mandarin-peppered English. But in fact, he has worked as an adviser for Jack Ma, the maverick founder of Alibaba Group, when China's largest e-commerce company was founded in a small apartment back in 1999.

Now Clark, who comes from Britain, has written a book about Ma and his monolithic company, "Alibaba: The House That Jack Ma Built."

Clark, in a crisp blue business shirt, sat down with Xinhua recently for an exclusive interview in the office of his consulting firm next to the CCTV "big pants" building to talk about his book on the eve of the G20 summit to be held in the Chinese city of Hangzhou -- incidentally, Ma's hometown in Zhejiang Province. Ma, who chairs the B-20 SME Development Task Force, is expected to attend the summit.

So what is the book about? Clark put it in a nutshell. "The book is really about two things: the Internet coming to China, the rise of the private sector. The combination is like an explosion, and Ma Yun is the guy with the match," Clark said.

Then of course there is "Jack" himself, as Clark mostly referred to Ma Yun, Alibaba's larger-than-life founder and chairman. After all, what good would a book on Alibaba be without mentioning Jack?

"His sense of humor is the first thing you notice," Clark said, adding that Jack would say "crazy things," for example that his company would be bigger than Amazon's or that he would rule the world -- all big visions while sitting in a little room. "You had to laugh. But somehow you didn't laugh at him, you were laughing with him ... but somehow, there was something about him that just seemed different."

Though he appeared to be a bit of an oddball, Clark said Jack proved himself to be "a team leader and a great communicator." Also, Jack had a knack for telling stories and "making people feel relaxed ... he makes you feel like he's talking to you, even if you're in a room of 3,000 people." Yet behind his Forrest Gump-like facade, Jack is actually "very strategic," a man who is always "looking, learning, building ideas."

In fact, Jack is a pragmatist at heart. Born into a modest background in China's Zhejiang Province, one could say that Jack was also born right into China's merchant culture. Bad in math, he "turned to his sense of imagination and his ability to be a performer" while hawking plastic carpets to supplement his income from teaching and translating. "He understands what it is to be a small merchant," Clark said. Also, he said, Jack understands his customers. "The success of Alibaba is really Taobao (Alibaba's consumer-to-consumer portal). The key to understanding Taobao is understanding the customer." A true-blooded business tycoon, "he'll do anything to get the deal."

And Jack is ambitious. "The strongest thing about him is ambition. The weakest thing about him is his ambition," Clark said, citing Alibaba's massive money market fund, Yu'e Bao, as an example, which shocked banks and had people turning against him. Still, thanks to Jack's strong communication and motivation skills, others "follow him into battle."

Clark mentioned Tencent as a foil to Alibaba. "Tencent is much more strategic, is much more cautious, and more focused. Alibaba is doing big things in finance, in media, in global... so ambition is the strong point and the weak point of the company." A double-edged sword indeed. "Investors sometimes love too much ambition, sometimes they're afraid, so it's a balance."

Clark said he was brought on board to advise Alibaba on its international expansion during the company's infancy as a contractor and "foreign friend." Clark also indicated that Alibaba was to a certain extent supportive in his writing the book, yet he emphasized he had worked independently on it.

"I did not have that sit-down with him," Clark said. In other words, he didn't conduct lengthy interviews with Jack, but he did have some time with Jack's number two, Joe Tsai.

Clark said he talked to current and former Alibaba employees as well as competitors. It was hard to find critical voices because Jack has "a very different management style" than Steve Jobs, Clark said, referring to the founder of Apple who wasn't known for his people skills. He wanted to steer clear of gossip about Alibaba's founder while making sure he was not producing a "puff piece."

Clark said his book is now being translated into 14 languages. "Brazil, Russia, Ukraine, Indonesia, Vietnam, Mongolia -- a lot of people actually buy stuff on Alibaba's websites, so they are interested in the company and also his story," he said.

Yet his book is not only about technology. "People don't love technology, they love people," the author said, and as such, a story about Alibaba's charismatic leader would attract more readers.

Clark aims to both entertain and inform. "I think Alibaba is a window into a deeper understanding of China," he said, hoping his readers can learn more about what is going on in China, for example as regards the Internet, its entrepreneurs and Zhejiang Province. Clark said that Jack had helped make Hangzhou, China's Silicon Valley, a major tech hub and further raised commerce in Zhejiang. "I hope one of the things of this book is it kind of opens people's eyes to the power of Zhejiang. The G20 will do that even more."

For Clark, finding some old Australian friends of Jack's -- the Morley family who had come to China in 1980 -- was a highlight. To track down David Morley, who is now running a Yoga studio in Australia, Clark conducted some "investigative journalism." "Nobody had told that story," Clark said. Now, Jack's friend David is also Clark's.

"The most fun part was building a friendship with David Morley. Actually, we've never met, but we send messages all the time," he said, adding that Jack has now started talking about the Morleys as well.

Another surprise that his book had in store for him after its publication was receiving a call from Wall Street Journal that a pirated copy of his book was available -- on an Alibaba marketplace. "The funniest thing was when my book was copied on Taobao," Clark said, amused. Alibaba later removed the links.

When asked how Jack benefited from the development of the Internet and China's opening-up, Clark suggested that Jack was born in the right place at the right time, as Hangzhou opened early to tourism and has a long tradition of commerce. Moreover, Jack "has benefited from certain crises. Actually, if you look back, crisis has been his opportunity."

Clark cited SARS as an example, when many people had to stay home and used their new broadband connection to shop online. That was exactly the time when Taobao was launched in 2003. The 2008 global financial crisis helped open up the Chinese market for him, as a lot of factories could not export to the United States.

Now, Clark said Jack can help facilitate China's shift from a manufacturing to a consumer-driven society. "Jack is offering a solution to China ... how to move from a made-in-China to a consumed-in-China or designed-in-China," he said. "Ma Yun can sell Alibaba as a way to actually move up the development of the middle class, give them more choice ... and create more innovative products. That's a dream."

Clark also addressed the subject of innovation and said that there has always been a history of copying among nations. He said while the private sector has to lead innovation, governments can create the conditions for it, such as education and intellectual property laws. "People in the West want to understand what is happening in China that might be original, or might be not just copycat," he said. Actually, he said Alibaba's Taobao and Tmall platforms are themselves innovative to a certain extent.

As for Alibaba's foray into overseas markets, Clark said there would have to be a wait-and-see approach. Although its e-commerce website AliExpress has taken off in Russia without Alibaba's even opening a single office, Clark is not so sure that success can be replicated in the United States with its highly sophisticated retail sector. He mentioned Amazon.

"Amazon is doing things differently from Alibaba. Amazon buys products and sells them, so they have inventory; Alibaba is just a market place, so they just connect buyers and sellers." However, Clark said that Amazon is now building its own products, which might pose a threat to its biggest customers yet harbor opportunities for Alibaba to compete with Amazon.

Looking forward, Clark said Alibaba's top future challenge is human resources, so it is trying to recruit its own foreign talent for its expansion through the Alibaba Global Leadership Academy. Young foreigners work for Alibaba in Hangzhou, become immersed in the company culture and are then dispatched overseas.

Ironically, Clark called Jack, the homegrown Hangzhou entrepreneur, "more of a global player" than Baidu's U.S.-educated Li Yanhong and said Jack has been actively involved in the globalization debate. Alibaba's founder has also been visiting Davos. "Jack was one of the earliest to start talking about corporate social responsibility, environmental responsibility because he tends to be ahead of where other people are," Clark said. So far, this has been a smart move for Alibaba's PR.

"For Alibaba going overseas, we will learn do they make the same mistakes that the West made coming here (to China)," Clark said. He suggested that a key to Alibaba's past success lies in Jack's flexibility, which may also serve him well in the future. "He tries to be all things to all people, and he's doing pretty well."


High-speed trains in China to get Wi-Fi in Dec.
(CRI Online) 14:32, August 26, 2016

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  File photo shows high-speed rail in China. [Photo: Xinhua]

Chinese passengers taking high-speed rail are soon to end their days suffering from weaknetwork signals as Wi-Fi is to be installed on the trains in December, Xinhua News Agencyreports.

Satellite transceivers, devices used for transmitting Wi-Fi signals, have been installed ontrains for further testing.

It is estimated that the Wi-Fi will be officially up and running by December.

The transceiver was developed by the 29th research institute of China ElectronicsTechnology Group Corporation (CETC).

Zhang Jie, a senior engineer from the institute says that the highest speed of high-speedtrains in China now runs at 350 km per hour, and their technology helps the Wi-Fi signal tobe uninfluenced by a train traveling under 500 km per hour. However, the number ofusers should not surpass 700, but since current high-speed trains have a capacity ofaround 560 people, the technology is fine for now.
 
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Microsoft and Cisco join Chinese cyber security programme
Alexander Sword | 14:57, August 26 2016

News: Chinese government signals greater cooperation on cyber security standards.

Cyber security tensions between China and the West may be thawing as US technology companies are invited to join the country’s technical committee.

Technical Committee 260 (TC260), which is in charge of the Chinese government’s cyber security standards, will now include Microsoft, Cisco, Intel and IBM as members, according to a report by the Wall Street Journal.

The companies will now be taking a role in drafting rules rather than simply participating as observers.

The committee aims to decide whether China will use standards deviating from international norms.

The Wall Street Journal reported that this means defining what technologies are “secure and controllable”.

This includes looking at sectors such as cloud computing and big data.

The committee originally comprised 48 members but was expanded in January to 81 members.

Including Western companies on the committee signals that China may be seeking greater cooperation with other countries.

The news comes after the Cyberspace Administration of China, which TC260 reports to, issued new guidelines urging stricter controls on cyber security but emphasising setting common standards.

The distrust has gone both ways. One of the world's largest telecommunications companies, Huawei, which is based in China, was banned from the United States networking equipment market due to alleged concerns that the company might undertake spying for the Chinese government.
 
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More news on cyber-security.

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Foreign firms take part in drafting cybersecurity rules in China
BY EVA DOU AUGUST 26 2016, 16:04

CHINA is taking a more inclusive tack in instituting cybersecurity standards for foreign technology companies, allowing them to join a key government committee in an effort to ease foreign concerns over the controls.

The committee under the government’s powerful cyberspace administration is in charge of defining cybersecurity standards.

For the first time, the body earlier this year allowed select foreign companies — Microsoft, Intel, Cisco Systems and IBM — to take an active part in drafting rules, rather than participating simply as observers, said people familiar with the discussions.

How much influence the foreign companies will have over committee deliberations remains to be seen, these people said.

Over the past few months, the committee’s seven working groups — which focus on encryption, big data and other cybersecurity issues — have each met at least once.

Representatives from Microsoft and Cisco confirmed the companies are members.

IBM and Intel did not immediately comment.

Taking a more consultative approach marks a shift for Beijing after nearly two years of battling the US and other Western governments, as well as foreign business groups, over its effort to tighten controls on information technology — in part, by pressuring suppliers to transfer technology and disclose proprietary information.

"It’s still early days, but there are encouraging signs that China is recognising the international nature of the tech supply chain and working more broadly to align its strategy with the market realities," said Bruce McConnell, vice-president of the EastWest Institute, a New York-based think tank.

McConnell, who is not involved with the Chinese committee, formerly served as a cybersecurity expert for the US Department of Homeland Security.

Beijing has been intensifying efforts to secure its technology supplies since Edward Snowden’s revelations in 2013 about the US government’s use of US products for espionage.

US trade groups and other critics have said that China is using security issues as a way to favour domestic tech companies.

China’s new approach is not likely to vent the heat over technology controls.

Earlier this month, 46 trade associations sent a joint letter to Chinese Premier Li Keqiang saying a draft law on cybersecurity that would increase government monitoring, and mandate data be stored locally, would "weaken security and separate China from the global digital economy", according to a copy of the letter reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.

The committee that the foreign companies are a part of is at the front of the struggle over whether China will adopt standards that deviate from international norms.

Known as Technical Committee 260, or TC260, it has the task of defining what technologies are "secure and controllable", said the people familiar with the committee.

The term "secure and controllable" appears in a number of recently adopted and proposed security regulations, but has yet to be defined in detail.

US companies are concerned that the term will be used to discriminate against nonChinese products.

Western companies have already found it harder to sell to Chinese government agencies and state-owned companies since the cybersecurity push began a few years ago.

Other standards TC260 is grappling with include those for rapidly evolving sectors like cloud computing and big data, according to the people familiar with the discussions.

Originally comprising 48 members, TC260 was expanded in January to 81 members, mainly consisting of Chinese officials and representatives of domestic technology companies.

The Cyberspace Administration of China, the internet regulator that TC260 reports to, signalled a change in tone in its latest cyber-directives, issued on August 22.

As with previous ones, the new guidelines urge stricter controls on cybersecurity, but they place new emphasis on setting common standards across China’s national and local governments and in influencing global rule making.

"We should energetically participate in the development of international rules and standards for the internet space, to strengthen our power of discourse and our influence," the administration said.

Aside from opening up the committee, Beijing has tried to show it is responsive to foreign concerns on cybersecurity in other ways.

It suspended rules that would have required the financial sector to prove its equipment is "secure and controllable" through intrusive testing and information disclosure.

National security and counter-terrorism laws that were passed last year and that require tech companies to support government security efforts rolled back some requirements such as encryption code handover.

In July, China took the unusual move of releasing its draft Cybersecurity Law for a second round of public comment.
 
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Australian products selling like hotcakes on Alibaba
Xinhua, August 26, 2016

A host of Australian companies are increasingly using Alibaba and reaching out to a growing, well-healed number of middle-class Chinese, who have a penchant for Aussie supplements, food and cosmetics products.

Chemist Warehouse chief operating officer Mario Tascone, which operates an online store on Alibaba's shopping site called Tmall.com, told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation on Friday that any type of product in the health and nutrition sphere is very desirable in China, especially among the nation's thriving middle class.

Chemist Warehouse sells a variety of vitamins, cosmetics and health products on Tmall, and has reached a record of 2 million Australian dollars (US$1.53 million) in sales within the first 46 minutes of trade on China's singles' day on Nov. 11.

"We don't look at promoting brands that are going to be popular in China and second guess what the Chinese market does," said Tascone.

Alibaba, which Forbes say is worth US$157.7 billion, is set to open its first Australian office in Melbourne this year.

To date the conglomerate has already formed partnerships with Woolworths and in May 2015 it signed a deal with Australia Post to connect Australian consumers with Chinese manufacturers while at the same time boosting Chinese consumption of Australian products.

Demand for Australian products has also been spurred by the rise of "daigou" or buying agents, effectively a Chinese person overseas who purchases goods for a customer back home in China.

Tascone said the company had seen a rise in tourists buying stock off shelves because of the lower price.

"The future for us is making sure we can co-exist in China and get products to that market but, all the while, making sure we don't miss our supply chain to what made us where we are today and that's the local customers," he said.

Tmall currently features 1,300 Australian brands of which 80 percent had entered China for the first time through Alibaba.

Alibaba's Australia and New Zealand managing director Maggie Zhou however cautioned that not everything from Australia sold well in China.

"You need to find the right products, and then you'll sell very well. But if the product is not right, you cannot be successful," she said.

"Price, what kind of right price is also very important. If you have several channels you need to manage the price very well, otherwise it would be a chaos."

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China to toughen regulation on online ads
2016-09-01 08:17 | Xinhua Editor: Mo Hong'e

China will intensify efforts to regulate online commercials following public ire over deceptive online advertising.

A temporary regulation will take effect on Sept. 1, requiring publishers to clearly mark all online commercials as advertisements to warn netizens, according to Gan Lin, vice head of the State Administration for Industry and Commerce (SAIC), on Wednesday.

A college student died in April after he followed allegedly deceptive information promoted by search engine Baidu and signed up for medical treatment at a Beijing hospital.

The upcoming regulation makes it clear that paid promotion of information on search engines is classed as advertising.

According to Gan, a department tasked with monitoring online commercials will also be established.

From September 2015 to August 2016, the SAIC and other market regulators discovered around 3,200 cases of unlawful online advertising and issued fines in the region of 67 million yuan (10 million U.S. dollars).
 
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China's manufacturing IoT spending to hit 128 bln USD by 2020: IDC
Source: Xinhua
Published: 2016/9/1 16:49:47

Chinese manufacturing enterprises' spending on the Internet of Things (IoT) is expected to grow by an annual average rate of 14.7 percent and hit 127.5 billion US dollars by 2020, a report showed Thursday.

"During the process, software and services will lead the way for fast growth with a combined market share of over 60 percent," according to the report by research firm International Data Corp. (IDC).

IoT is a strategic emerging industry in China, and was included in the 13th Five-year Development Plan. "Made in China 2025" is a 10-year action plan that aims to build China into a manufacturing powerhouse.

Promoting smart manufacturing -- raising the level of networked, collaborative manufacturing and expediting the manufacturing industry's transformation into services -- is the way forward for the industry, said the IDC report.

"Many Chinese manufacturers have started to implement an IoT strategy to improve production, efficiency and evolve their business models," said Wang Yue, senior research manager at IDC China.

With the promotion of smart manufacturing, the fast integration of information technology and operational technology (OT), and the prevalence of the "digital twin" concept, there is plenty of room for development in the manufacturing industry, according to Wang.

In the next two years, three major trends will lead IoT development in China's manufacturing industry -- IoT platform competition will intensify, manufacturing IoT applications will accelerate innovation, while edge computing will become the next area to be expanded, IDC forecast.

IoT will see tangible objects connected to the Internet, allowing them to interact with other devices.
 
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Three young men sit on a bench, with their heads buried in their smartphones, in Xianyang, North China's Shaanxi province, November 6, 2014. [Photo/IC]

The number of Chinese using internet rose to 710 million as of June, accounting for 51.7 percent of the country's total population, exceeding the global average by 3.1 percent, according to a report released by China Internet Network Information Center (CNNIC) on August 3.

As internet penetration level keeps rising, some trends in internet development are visible, according to a report by 199it.com. Here are the top 10 trends.

Trend 1: The group of phubbers is expanding

Phubbers are people who engage in phubbing, "the act of snubbing someone in a social setting by looking at a phone instead of paying attention".

The number of people using their mobile phones to surf the internet reached 656 million, increasing from 90.1 percent of the total internet users at the end of last year to 92.5 percent as of June.

In addition, people surfing the internet only via mobile phones account for 24.5 percent of the total internet users.


A baby watches an animated cartoon on a smartphone in Jinan, East China's Shandong province, May 25, 2016. [Photo/IC]

Trend 2: Video-streaming websites are getting more users

The number of internet users watching video online increased to 514 million as of June, up 10 million from the end of last year, with 440 million using mobile phones to watch videos online.



Thomas, nicknamed "Afu", a German who has become an internet celebrity in China, uses his smartphone to pay a bus fare through Alipay, the mobile payment service of Alibaba's Ant Financial, during a no-cash one-day tour in Hangzhou, east China's Zhejiang province, August 22, 2016. [Photo/IC]

Trend 3: The lifestyle of "no cash" becomes popular

People using online payments rose to 455 million as of June, with 64.7 percent of them having the experience of paying via smartphones.


An internet user browses the website of Taobao.com of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group in Tianjin, March 22, 2016. [Photo/IC]

Trend 4: The number of online shoppers keeps rising

A total of 448 million internet users shopped online as of June, with 61 percent of them shopping via smartphones.


An internet celebrity live broadcasts shopping in a mall in Taiyuan, North China's Shanxi province, August 6, 2016. [Photo/VCG]

Trend 5: Online live broadcast is rocketing

The number of online live broadcast users reached 325 million as of June, accounting for 45.8 percent of internet users.



Customers play online games in an internet café in Qingdao, East China's Shangdong province, June 1, 2016. [Photo/VCG]

Trend 6: More than half of internet users play online games

Online game player amounted to 391 million as of June, accounting 55.1 percent of internet users. The number of internet users playing online games via smartphones reached 302 million, up 23 million from the end of last year.


Visitors walk past the stand of Chinese online travel agency Tuniu.com during an exhibition in Beijing, June 27, 2015. [Photo/IC]

Trend 7: Online travel services are attracting more users

A total of 264 million internet users used online travel services as of June, with the number of people using smartphones to reserve tickets, hotels or tourism products reaching 232 million, a10.7 percent increase from the end of last year.


The icons of the mobile apps of taxi-hailing apps Didi Chuxing (upper) and Uber on a smartphone are pictured in Hangzhou, east China's Zhejiang province, August 1, 2016. [Photo/IC]

Trend 8: Online ride-hailing services are getting more customers

As ride-hailing services have been granted legal status in China, it has been used by 159 million users as of June, which means 22.3 percent of internet users have tried the service.
 
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Food delivery man Fang Liang hands the food to a customer in Taicang, East China's Jiangsu province, July 30, 2016. [Photo/VCG]

Trend 9: Online food ordering and delivery services are prospering

Food ordering and delivery service apps users increased by 40 percent in the first six months of this year, with 146 million people using their phone to order food.


A woman uses Yuebao, a fund management app under Alipay of Alibaba Group, on her smartphone as she counts yuan banknotes at home in Zhengzhou, Central China's Henan province, October 2, 2014.

Trend 10: Internet financing is booming

The number of people purchasing internet financing products reached 101 million as of June, increasing by 11 million from the end of last year.
 
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I am not a fan of online mobile games, but cashless life and Internet financial products are my things. I have 100,000 yuan in Alibaba's Alipay...not much, but their interest rate is quite high and more flexible.
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Annual interest I receive can pay my Lijiang trip!
 
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I use my phone for none of the above.

Heck, I must be old! A dinosaur really. :(
 
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