Topic

Bilibilii

Bilibili is a video-sharing services provider that has been dubbed China's YouTube. The company began mainly as a site for teens to watch Japanese cartoons. It has broadened its offerings, which include user-generated content that spans comics, games and memes. Bilibili notably pioneered “bullet comments”, user comments that scroll directly over videos. Bilibili also publishes video games, but mainly for titles developed by other companies. The company is backed by Tencent as well as Alibaba, which owns the South China Morning Post.

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  • Top influencer Thurman Maoyibei, whose accounts were shut down over the weekend, is among those caught up in campaign launched late last year
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Chinese video-sharing platform Bilibili has restructured its content units and is doubling down on the live streaming business, as the US and Hong Kong-listed company struggles to make a profit.

Chinese think tank commentator says he can’t imagine Beijing having ‘interest in the private affairs of the Princess of Wales. Unless, I am shown some evidence’.

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Beijing is moving to curb excessive spending on video games across the country, according to a new draft regulation, dealing another blow to the world’s largest video gaming market after a lengthy government crackdown.

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The streaming platform popular with Millennials and Gen Z said the comment ‘ah?’, an expression of surprise, is the ‘most representative’ of 2023.

Tencent, China’s biggest social media and video gaming company, is closing its live-streaming service Now, as the company continues to consolidate its video businesses.

The new policy by major online platforms Weibo, WeChat, Douyin, Kuaishou and Bilibili underscores their commitment to support Beijing’s crackdown on anonymous Chinese social media accounts.

Chinese technology companies got back on track for growth in the second quarter, as they continue to pin high hopes on generative artificial intelligence (AI) amid uncertainties in the macro environment.

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China’s own anime-style games, including miHoYo’s Genshin Impact, Honkai series and HyperGryph’s Arknights drew attention at Bilibili’s annual ACG event.

At its annual Spark conference, Tencent asserted its commitment to create technologically advanced games, which underscores how mainland China’s video gaming market is fast emerging from a downturn.

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Watch out, Disney, Yao-Chinese Folktales is taking China by storm. The animated anthology series has been viewed more than 72 million times this month on video-streaming platform Bilibili.

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Video streaming platform Bilibili and Twitter-like microblogging service Weibo have cut hundreds of people from their workforce, according to sources.

Sinopec plans to delist from London Stock Exchange on November 1, with market observers saying that other mainland Chinese companies could exit overseas markets amid rising political and economic risks.

The Shanghai-based live-streaming platform operator has become one of the most shorted US stocks among companies with a market value of US$2 billion or more.

The Chinese Basketball Association is demanding US$60.12 million in legal compensation from Bilibili for the unauthorised streaming of games during the league’s 2019-2020 season.

China’s two largest gaming companies have not been granted licences for new video game titles in a year, while rivals Bilibili and ByteDance appear on the latest list of approvals.

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China’s internet watchdog wants all social platforms to review all user comments before they are published, fanning concerns that freedom of speech will be further restricted.

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Fans of the five-member girl group A-Soul were angered after the dismissal of the character Carol, leading to allegations of worker abuse for the real performer whose voice and movements animated her.

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Train to Busan director Yeon Sang-ho’s 2011 animated film of the same name was extremely dark. This adaptation for a Korean drama series captures its essence while being more accessible.

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