Baidu Visa Ads Was offline after Chinese Writer’ s Complained!

On Sept. 6, a popular Weibo post by Liu Liu, said she had searched the official address of US consulate in Shanghai on Baidu and had turned over many Ads by scammers. She also @ Li Yanhong, Baidu CEO. What happen? Baidu made an apologize after Liu Liu raised concerns about the issue on Aug 6.   Liu Liu – a famous Chinese female Writer. Baidu–the largest Search Engine of china in the World. This incident has aroused the attention of many Netizens, and has forwarded more than 40,000 comments. Baidu responded that it will go offline with Ads related to the “US Consulate in Shanghai” . Obviously it’s hard to trust.Some Netizens even questioned baidu’s lack of rectification: Need exposure to correct it? Visa Services In fact, sometimes you don’t have to log in the Website to search for the visa. You can follow our official Wechat ( HACOS瀚客), and consult our consultants to get the latest visa information. We will provide you with a one-stop service. The visa easy comes, the world easy goes! Hacos can help you: China Visa: China Work Permit, Permanent Residence HongKong Visa   Abroad Visa: America, Canada, Australia, UK, Thailand, Schengen visa…etc.  Any type you need,  anywhere you want to go,  HACOS can help you!

Cryptocurrency Promo Events Banned In China!

Events promoting cryptocurrencies have been banned in Guangzhou by the city’s Financial Development Bureau (FDBG), according to numerous reports. The move comes in the wake of a prohibition on crypto promo events in Beijing’s Chaoyang District late last month. Image | Pixabay The FDBG stated that “all relevant units in the district (of Guangzhou) may not undertake any form of virtual currency promotion and publicity activities,” according to National Business Daily. The aim of the ban is allegedly to:  “protect the property rights and interests of the public, safeguard the legal currency status of the renminbi, prevent money laundering and maintain the security and stability of the financial system.” The move is the latest in a long line of measures aimed at clamping down on crypto exchanges and services.  According to Crowdfund Insider, Chinese government officials recently stated their intention to block citizens from accessing over 100 offshore cyrptocurrency exchanges. Currently, only four major exchanges are blocked:  Binance,  Bitfinex,  Huobi OKEx. Back in April, the outgoing head of China’s central bank, Zhou Xiaochuan, took aim at cryptocurrencies, stating “We do not currently recognize Bitcoin and other digital currencies as a tool like paper money, coins and credit cards for retail payments. The banking system does not accept it.” According to Technode, tech giant Baidu recently closed a large number of online forums related to virtual currencies and Alibaba and Tencet are allegedly working to combat crypto transitions made through their e-payment platforms.  And the battle for blockchain’s acceptance in China continues…