Tudou

Tudou, Inc. (simplified Chinese: 土豆网; traditional Chinese: 土豆網; pinyin: Tǔdòu Wǎng; lit.: 'Potato Net') is a Chinese video-sharing website headquartered in Shanghai, China, where users can upload, view and share video clips. Tudou went live on April 15, 2005 and by September 2007 served over 55 million videos each day.[2]

Tudou, Inc.
Screenshot
Screenshot of Tudou home page
Type of businessSubsidiary
Type of site
Video hosting service
Available inChinese
FoundedFebruary 15, 2005 (2005-02-15)
Headquarters,
Key peopleGary Wang, CEO
Sam Lai, CFO
Grace Wang, CAO
Sarah Jiang, CCO
Evelyn Wang, CSO
Deng Wei, VP
Anita Huang, VP
Yongzhu Song, VP
Yu Bin, VP
ParentYouku
URLwww.tudou.com
Alexa rank 2,292 (November 2018)[1]
RegistrationOptional
(required to upload)
LaunchedFebruary 15, 2005
Current statusActive

In 2007 Tudou was one of the world's largest bandwidth users, moving more than 1 Petabyte per day to 7 million users. YouTube serves a larger number of videos per day, but the average Tudou video is longer in duration, meaning the total number of minutes of video being streamed daily from Tudou is significantly larger - about 15 billion minutes vs. 3 billion for YouTube.[2]

The Shanghai-based service uses Adobe Flash technology to publish more than 50,000 new videos each day, including amateur content such as videoblogging and original videos, movie and TV clips, and music videos. Unregistered users can watch videos on the site, while registered users are permitted to upload an unlimited number of videos, using on-line and Windows-based upload tools.[3]

On March 12, 2012, it was announced that Youku reached an agreement to acquire Tudou in a stock-for-stock transaction, and the new entity will be named Youku Tudou Inc.[4]

History

Tudou was founded by Gary Wang and Dutchman Marc van der Chijs, whom Wang met while at Bertelsmann Media Group in China. The name Tudou is Chinese Pinyin (Romanized Chinese) for Potato. It was previously known as Toodou.com, and changed its domain name to Tudou.com in August 2006 when that domain became available. According to CEO Wang, the name comes from the English idiom "couch potato." He stated that his goal was to move couch potatoes from the television screen to the computer screen.[5]

Prior to Tudou, Wang lived in the United States and returned to China to work for multi-national companies. Tudou was originally conceptualized as a video blogging company and the site launched on April 15, 2005, in its current format, several months after YouTube.

Like many technology startups, Tudou was started on a small budget with a raw technology team. It was initially self-financed at about $100,000, then in 2005 raised a $500,000 seed round. Its first major funding round was in 2006 for $8.5 million from IDG China, GGV Capital (formerly Granite Global Ventures), and JAFCO Asia. Tudou's second funding was in early 2007 for $19 million and was led by Boston-based General Catalyst Partners and Shanghai-based Capital Today, with other existing investors participating.[2] The fourth round of funding was on April 28, 2008, for $57 million from existing investors IDG Technology Venture Investment (IDGVC), Granite Global Ventures and General Catalyst Partners, and also included a member of the Rockefeller family.[6] The most recent funding was announced on August 5, 2010 for $50 million from the Temasek Holdings and existing investors.[7]

Rapid growth

During the summer of 2007, Nielsen/NetRatings reported that Tudou was one of the fastest growing websites on the Web, growing from 131 million to 360 million video clips per week in just three months. According to a July 16, 2007, survey, 55 million video clips are viewed daily on Tudou, with an additional 20,000 new videos uploaded every 24 hours.[8] Neilsen's measurements indicate the website averages nearly 40 million visitors per month.[9]

According to Chinese tracking service iResearch, as of the mid-2007, Tudou has over 50% of the Chinese online video market.[10] iResearch reported Tudou reached 95 million monthly unique visitors as of June 2009, and 170 million as of June 2010.

Funding

Tudou completed its financial fund series A to E between year 2005 to 2010 in November 2005, April 2006, April 2007, April 2008, and August 2010 respectively. A total of US$135 million was raised from a roster of venture capital organizations including IDG Ventures China, Jafco Asia, GGV Capital, General Catalyst Partners, Capital Today, KTB, JAIC, Cyber Agent, Venrock, Crescent Point, and Temasek Holdings.

Recent events

In July 2007, Tudou introduced one of the world's first large-scale video advertising systems for video sites, several months ahead of YouTube.[10] In late September 2007, Intel and Tudou announced a partnership to explore wireless video sharing technologies and video applications for mobile devices. Tudou also agreed to increase its use of Intel CPUs in its rapidly growing video encoder server farms. Intel will also promote its products through the Tudou advertising system.[11]

In December 2007, Tudou introduced videos in the H.264 format, providing higher quality and standards-based video.[12]

In the aftermath of the 2008 Sichuan earthquake on May 12, the service of the website was suspended until May 21 due to the period of national mourning.

On September 10, 2008, Tudou received its license[13] from SARFT.

A portion of Tudou's content comes from commercial sources and is not user-generated. The company says that the Chinese often go to Tudou for TV-like saq-media, instead of using their televisions. Starting 2008 Tudou launched licensed content acquisition and partnership programs aggregating selective premium professional contents. Nevertheless, Tudou still comes under criticism for its disregard of some copyright policies.

Video review

Tudou's in-house reviewers watch, approve, and categorize all uploaded videos. The reviewers screen for inappropriate content such as pornography and categorize / tag each video.[14]

Technical notes

Video format

Tudou's video playback technology is based on Macromedia's Flash Player. This technology allows the site to display videos with quality comparable to more established video playback technologies (such as Windows Media Player, QuickTime and RealPlayer) that generally require the user to download and install a web browser plugin in order to view video. Flash also requires a plug-in, but the Flash 7 plug-in is generally considered to be present on approximately 90% of online computers.[15] The video can also be played back with gnash(cannot) or VLC. It has pixel dimensions of 320 by 240 (4:3) or 352 by 264 (16:9), depending on the aspect ratio of the source video. Videos run at 25 frames per second with a maximum data rate of 300kbit/s.

Tudou accepts uploaded videos in a variety of formats, including .WMV, .AVI, .MOV, MPEG and .MP4.[3]

Video can be seen in windowed mode or full screen mode; it is possible to switch the mode during the viewing of any video without reloading it because of the full-screen function of Adobe Systems Flash Player 9.

Because of the copyright and licensing issues, some Tudou videos are blocked to international IP addresses.

Bandwidth

Tudou reports that it's one of the world's largest bandwidth users, sending over 1PB (Petabyte) of video files per day, which is nearly 100Gbit/s of sustained traffic. The company uses a variety of proprietary and commercial content distribution networks (CDNs), such as ChinaCache to distribute videos around China.[16]

The domain tudou.com attracted almost 10 million visitors annually by 2008 according to a Compete.com survey.[17]

gollark: Among many other things.
gollark: A Linux-based one would allow me to avoid the very hard work of "implementing every network driver ever".
gollark: I mean, that would be cooler but involve a lot of duplicated effort and complexity.
gollark: Oh, and a CC program to connect to that and run commands like "update" and "full restart" and "configure networking".
gollark: If I were to ever get round to implementing this, it would use Alpine or something similar, and just ship with CraftOS-PC automatically started on boot, as well as a websocket-accessible daemon to let it run commands on the real device.

See also

References

  1. "Tudou.com Site Info". Alexa Internet. Archived from the original on 2018-11-12. Retrieved 2018-11-12.
  2. " Tudou now bigger than Youtube?" Shanghaiist, October 11, 2007.
  3. "Tudou Website". Tudou.com. Retrieved 2014-06-28.
  4. "China's Youku to Buy Chief Rival Tudou". The Wall Street Journal. March 12, 2012. Retrieved March 12, 2012.
  5. Tudou.com Uploaders to Share Ad Revenue, "Sina News" July 4, 2007.
  6. "Chinese Video Site Tudou Receives Another Big Round of $57 Million". Washingtonpost.com. Retrieved 2014-06-28.
  7. "Tudou raises $50M more for mobile video explosion". Venturebeat.com. 2010-08-05. Retrieved 2014-06-28.
  8. "Targeting China’s Younger Generation" CScout April 24, 2007
  9. "From 131 Million to 360 Million - Tudou.com Triples Weekly Clip View in just Three Months". Nielsen NetRatings Press ReleaseJuly 8, 2007
  10. "Original Video Content Site Tudou.com Launches Video Advertising Platform" Archived 2007-08-19 at Archive.today American Venture Magazine. July 16, 2007.
  11. "Intel Sets Out to Work with Tudou to Further Video Tech" Archived 2007-11-11 at the Wayback Machine XinHua News. 2007-09-21.
  12. "Tudou Site h.264 Announcement" Tudou Site. December 2007.
  13. "Marc van der Chijs' Shanghaied Weblog: Tudou gets SARFT license". Marc.cn. September 10, 2008. Retrieved 2008-11-29.
  14. "Testing China's Web Tolerance" Business Week. 2006-01-23.
  15. "Adobe Flash Player Version Penetration" "Adobe Website"
  16. "A Big Funding Round For Chinese Web 2.0 Arms Dealer ChinaCache" Archived 2007-10-12 at the Wayback Machine "BillsDue" April 26, 2007
  17. "Siteanalytics.compete.com". Siteanalytics.compete.com. 2011-10-26. Retrieved 2014-06-28.
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