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The dispute prompted Baidu CEO Robin Li to announce at an Internet conference this week in the southern city of Shenzhen that he would shut down the service if it could not be resolved, according to Kuo.
"We appealed Baidu to curb and correct their infringing activities. If they did so, we welcome it," said Yang Chengzhi, Communist Party secretary of the government-sanctioned China Writers' Association. Baidu has more than 75 percent of China's search market, with Google in second place at just under 20 percent. Google's share has eroded since it closed its China-based search engine last March to avoid having to comply with government requirements to censor results. Baidu says it will launch a system in May to screen material on Baidu Library and block the uploading of copyrighted works. ___ Online: Baidu Inc.: http://www.baidu.com/ Baidu Library: http://wenku.baidu.com/
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