Baidu Tieba

Baidu Tieba (Chinese: 百度贴吧; pinyin: bǎidù tiēbā; lit.: 'Baidu Post Bar') is the most used Chinese communication platform hosted by Chinese search engine company Baidu, and was established on December 3, 2003. It is an online community that heavily integrates Baidu's search engine. Users may search for a topic of interest forum — known as a "bar" — which will then be created if it does not exist already.[1] Baidu Tieba accumulated over 300 million monthly active users by 2015 and the number of its total registered users reached 1.5 billion.[2]

Baidu Tieba
Type of site
Bulletin Board Service
Available inChinese, Vietnamese, Japanese
HeadquartersBeijing, Haidian 10, Shangdi Street, Baidu Building, China
OwnerBaidu
Created byRobin Li
URLtieba.baidu.com
wapp.baidu.com(mobile version)
CommercialYes
RegistrationCompulsory

Introduction

Baidu Tieba uses "bars", or forums, as a place for users to socially interact. The slogan of Baidu Tieba is "Born for your interest" (Chinese: 为兴趣而生). As of 2014, there were more than eight million bars, mostly created by fans, which covered a variety of topics, such as celebrities, films, comics and books. More than one billion posts have been published in these bars. According to Alexa Internet, traffic to Baidu Tieba makes up more than 10% of the total traffic to Baidu properties.[3]

Functions

Every bar can have up to three masters, thirty vice-masters, and ten video-masters to manage uploaded videos.

Prior to 2010, Baidu Tieba allowed anonymous posting, displaying only the IP address of the poster. Since then, users are required to have a registered account in order to post on bars. Users can post at most ten pictures and one video quoted from certain broadcast websites. Users cannot edit any published posts. However, users can delete their own published posts and comments from other users on their posts.

Beyond regular text posts, Baidu Tieba allows for the use of polls. Every bar has its own 2GB space for members to upload videos. If a bar is ranked within the top 500 of the official rankings, it has its own album.

History

On November 25, 2003, Baidu Tieba began internal testing. It was released to the public on December 3, 2003. It is a completely user-driven network service. The idea of the paste bar came from Yu Jun, Baidu's Chief Product Designer. Around the same time, the paste bar was combined with the Baidu search engine to build an online communication platform, letting people communicate to those with similar interests.

On February 25, 2005, Barzhu Bar became an official platform of Baidu Tieba, and was used for communication between the owners of different bars.

On April 15, 2009, Tieba Cloud was integrated into Baidu Tieba.

In 2012, Baidu Tieba updated its interface, switching from a simple reply-by-sequence user interface into a more complicated reply-in-same-floor one. Along with the new interface, new functionalities such as rankings, more expressive pictures, and allowing administrators to change the background images of Tieba, were also implemented.

On May 13, 2019, topics posted in Baidu Tieba before January 1, 2017 were hidden. A Baidu official said that the topics are hidden temporarily due to “system maintenance”.[4] The maintenance duration is about 1 month.

Baidu Tieba has become a popular comprehensive forum in China, with a large number of users actively posting, replying to each other, and interacting with each other.

Overseas development

Postbar is the international version of Baidu Tieba. In order to expand its commercial domain, Baidu Postbar has been introduced to several countries listed below:

In late 2011, the Japanese version of Baidu Postbar was shut down.

Since May 2015, all logins are disabled on the Vietnamese version of Baidu Postbar.

gollark: I think modern WiFi stuff uses *multiple* antennas, actually, it's called "MIMO".
gollark: It would also not be very useful for spying on people, since they would just stop saying things if they got a notification saying "interception agent has been added to the chat" and it wouldn't work retroactively.
gollark: One proposal for backdooring encrypted messaging stuff was to have a way to remotely add extra participants invisibly to an E2Ed conversation. If you have that but without the "invisible" bit, that would work as "encryption with a backdoor, but then make it very obvious that the backdoor has been used" somewhat.
gollark: Not encryption itself, probably.
gollark: They don't seem to want to *ban* end-to-end encryption as much as backdoor the popularly used stuff. Which is still bad. I should finish writing that blog post on it some time this decade.

References

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