
iQIYI Sports Lands Streaming Rights for Italian Serie A
iQIYI Sports, a video streaming platform owned by Beijing-based tech giant Baidu, announced on Thursday that it has won the rights to broadcast Italian Serie A football competitions.
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iQIYI Sports, a video streaming platform owned by Beijing-based tech giant Baidu, announced on Thursday that it has won the rights to broadcast Italian Serie A football competitions.
Bilibili, a leading Chinese video streaming platform, on Tuesday published its "2021 Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) Report."
On Feb.3, Shanghai police detained 14 people from China’s largest subtitling site Renren Yingshi due to suspicions they pirated more than 20,000 Chinese and foreign television shows and films.
Bilibili announced it has obtained exclusive digital media copyrights for the current and upcoming seasons (2021-2024) of the Football Association Challenge Cup in the Chinese mainland.
Tencent's Q2 financial report shows the total usage time of WeChat Video Channels, a content recording and creation sub-platform, exceeded 80% of total usage time of WeChat Moments, a social network feature within the app.
Chinese video streaming platform Bilibili is testing its "UPowerchain" related to the firm's Metaverse business.
Bilibili announced on Wednesday that its board of directors approved a motion to pursue voluntary conversion to a dual-primary listing on the Main Board of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange (HKEx).
In an era where Chinese women as a whole start to question the long-existing gender norms, Mango seems to have found a recipe for women of all ages that would provoke discussion but in a gentle and discreet manner.
On Feb. 24, 2021, China’s leading video streaming platform Bilibili (NASDAQ: BILI) announced unaudited financial results for the fourth quarter of the year, as well as for the fiscal year ending on Dec. 31, 2020.
On Monday, Chinese streaming video service Le.com reported that the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) had fined the company 240 million yuan ($37 million) for a financial fraud running from 2007 to 2016.