BEIJING — Baidu Inc., which operates China’s most popular search engine, said Tuesday that it will distribute music from three global labels in a deal that its partners say could help clean up China’s piracy-plagued music market.
Music companies have sued Baidu twice on accusations that it profited from unlicensed music copying by maintaining “deep links” on its search engine directly to sections of pirate websites.
The venture steps up Baidu’s rivalry with Google Inc., which closed its China search engine last year but still operates a music download service in China, which has 485 million Internet users.
Baidu said it will distribute music from One-Stop China - a joint venture of Universal Music, Warner Music and Sony Music - and pay them for the content. The downloads are available only to computers with Internet addresses in China.
Baidu and the music companies also agreed to end outstanding litigation.
China is seen as a major potential market for online music and video, but legitimate suppliers have been hampered by rampant piracy.
In what the music companies see as a key part of their agreement, Baidu promised to eliminate “deep links” to pirate music sites, said Andrew Chan, One-Stop China’s chief representative.
“That means all traffic will be directed to legal links,” he said.
Mr. Chan expressed hope that the commitment by such a prominent Chinese company to legal music would cause other websites to stop using pirated copies.
“We believe many medium- and small-size companies that have infringed our music rights for a long time will think they have to change,” he said. “They will see their big brother, Baidu, is changing to be a legal music service provider.”
In the legal settlement, Baidu agreed to donate an undisclosed sum to the anti-piracy fund of a global music industry group, the International Federation of Phonographic Industries, according to the IFPI’s Asia regional director, Leong May Seey.
Baidu had 75.9 percent of China’s search market in the three months ending in June, while Google was in second place with 18.9 percent, according to Analysys International, a research firm in Beijing.
About 500,000 songs from the music companies’ global, Mandarin and Cantonese catalogs will be made available through Baidu at the start, with that number expected to rise to 1 million titles as new releases are added, Mr. Chan said.
A Baidu spokesman, Kaiser Kuo, said the company was not releasing revenue forecasts.
Mr. Chan said he expected One-Stop China’s digital music revenues in China to double or triple in a short period, though he had no financial details. The venture was created in 2009 and has a separate agreement to distribute music through China Unicom Ltd., one of China’s three mobile phone carriers.
Baidu’s music downloads will be free to users through its advertising-supported “ting!” platform. But Mr. Chan said the company also is looking to create a pay section that will offer additional services.
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