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Is China’s First ‘Homegrown’ Web Browser a Google Chrome Ripoff?

Hamartia Antidote

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LOL!! Can they do anything by themselves?

http://www.sixthtone.com/news/1002778/is-chinas-first-homegrown-web-browser-a-google-chrome-ripoff

A startup that claims to have developed China’s first and only fully homegrown web browser raised hundreds of millions of yuan in its latest investment round — but now netizens are saying that its source files appear to have been copied from Google’s widely used web browser, Chrome.

AllMobilize Inc., a Beijing web startup founded in 2012 by entrepreneur Chen Benfeng and Harvard graduate Gao Jing, announced on Wednesday that it had “developed China’s first web browser with fully homegrown core technology and intellectual property, and broken the monopoly of the U.S.” The company calls its browser “Redcore.”

Also in the statement, AllMobilize said that it had raised 250 million yuan ($36 million) in its series C fundraising round from Morningside Venture Capital, IDG Capital, Fortune Venture Capital, and other investors, including several government agencies. Redcore brands itself as an “enterprise service browser,” and its clients include several official organs and state-owned enterprises, such as the State Council and the State Grid Corporation.

The startup’s claim was immediately put to the test by netizens, who gave low marks for innovation. On Wednesday, several internet users posted on microblogging site Weibo that after decompressing the installation package using unzip software, they discovered that many of the installation files for AllMobilize’s browser could be traced to Chrome.

Du Cheng, a technology writer from Chinese tech news outlet PingWest, wrote in his latest blog post on Wednesday that he had tested the originality of the Redcore browser, which he described as having a settings interface similar to Google Chrome. Upon closer inspection, Du found that Redcore’s installation package even contained the Chrome file icon, along with the browser’s version number. The file’s properties also showed that its original name was “chrome.exe.”

Redcore’s official Weibo page has been flooded with criticism from outraged netizens, many of whom accuse it of bringing shame to China. “Nice job, so this is the browser you ‘independently developed’ — Google Chrome?” commented one user. One video of a tech-savvy netizen decompressing Redcore’s installation package has been shared over 10,000 times.

As of Wednesday evening, the Redcore browser was no longer available for download from AllMobilize’s website.

Most people access the internet today via one of four browser engines: Trident for Internet Explorer, Gecko for Mozilla Firefox, WebKit for Safari, and Blink for Google Chrome. All four engines are developed by U.S. tech companies. Meanwhile, the most popular “Chinese” browsers — Sogou and Tencent’s 360 — use Chrome’s open-source Blink engine, and have never claimed to be independently developed. But as Sino-U.S. tensions have risen with the threat of an impending trade war, China has been vigorously promoting “independent innovation” to reduce domestic reliance on foreign intellectual property.



AllMobilize’s co-founder and chief operating officer, Gao Jing, responded to the barrage of allegations by saying that while Redcore does indeed “include Chrome inside,” it had not stolen intellectual property, but rather “innovated by standing on the shoulders of giants.” Gao added that Redcore had been well-received by users, and that her company was not using the banner of “domestic innovation” to scam people out of money.
 
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LOL!! Can they do anything by themselves?

http://www.sixthtone.com/news/1002778/is-chinas-first-homegrown-web-browser-a-google-chrome-ripoff

A startup that claims to have developed China’s first and only fully homegrown web browser raised hundreds of millions of yuan in its latest investment round — but now netizens are saying that its source files appear to have been copied from Google’s widely used web browser, Chrome.

AllMobilize Inc., a Beijing web startup founded in 2012 by entrepreneur Chen Benfeng and Harvard graduate Gao Jing, announced on Wednesday that it had “developed China’s first web browser with fully homegrown core technology and intellectual property, and broken the monopoly of the U.S.” The company calls its browser “Redcore.”

Also in the statement, AllMobilize said that it had raised 250 million yuan ($36 million) in its series C fundraising round from Morningside Venture Capital, IDG Capital, Fortune Venture Capital, and other investors, including several government agencies. Redcore brands itself as an “enterprise service browser,” and its clients include several official organs and state-owned enterprises, such as the State Council and the State Grid Corporation.

The startup’s claim was immediately put to the test by netizens, who gave low marks for innovation. On Wednesday, several internet users posted on microblogging site Weibo that after decompressing the installation package using unzip software, they discovered that many of the installation files for AllMobilize’s browser could be traced to Chrome.

Du Cheng, a technology writer from Chinese tech news outlet PingWest, wrote in his latest blog post on Wednesday that he had tested the originality of the Redcore browser, which he described as having a settings interface similar to Google Chrome. Upon closer inspection, Du found that Redcore’s installation package even contained the Chrome file icon, along with the browser’s version number. The file’s properties also showed that its original name was “chrome.exe.”

Redcore’s official Weibo page has been flooded with criticism from outraged netizens, many of whom accuse it of bringing shame to China. “Nice job, so this is the browser you ‘independently developed’ — Google Chrome?” commented one user. One video of a tech-savvy netizen decompressing Redcore’s installation package has been shared over 10,000 times.

As of Wednesday evening, the Redcore browser was no longer available for download from AllMobilize’s website.

Most people access the internet today via one of four browser engines: Trident for Internet Explorer, Gecko for Mozilla Firefox, WebKit for Safari, and Blink for Google Chrome. All four engines are developed by U.S. tech companies. Meanwhile, the most popular “Chinese” browsers — Sogou and Tencent’s 360 — use Chrome’s open-source Blink engine, and have never claimed to be independently developed. But as Sino-U.S. tensions have risen with the threat of an impending trade war, China has been vigorously promoting “independent innovation” to reduce domestic reliance on foreign intellectual property.



AllMobilize’s co-founder and chief operating officer, Gao Jing, responded to the barrage of allegations by saying that while Redcore does indeed “include Chrome inside,” it had not stolen intellectual property, but rather “innovated by standing on the shoulders of giants.” Gao added that Redcore had been well-received by users, and that her company was not using the banner of “domestic innovation” to scam people out of money.

lol china copy se baaz nahi ayega .......:enjoy:
Do you know that nginx which powers 40% of the web was developed by a russian guy. There is a thing called open source.
https://w3techs.com/technologies/details/ws-nginx/all/all
 
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LOL!! Can they do anything by themselves?

http://www.sixthtone.com/news/1002778/is-chinas-first-homegrown-web-browser-a-google-chrome-ripoff

A startup that claims to have developed China’s first and only fully homegrown web browser raised hundreds of millions of yuan in its latest investment round — but now netizens are saying that its source files appear to have been copied from Google’s widely used web browser, Chrome.

AllMobilize Inc., a Beijing web startup founded in 2012 by entrepreneur Chen Benfeng and Harvard graduate Gao Jing, announced on Wednesday that it had “developed China’s first web browser with fully homegrown core technology and intellectual property, and broken the monopoly of the U.S.” The company calls its browser “Redcore.”

Also in the statement, AllMobilize said that it had raised 250 million yuan ($36 million) in its series C fundraising round from Morningside Venture Capital, IDG Capital, Fortune Venture Capital, and other investors, including several government agencies. Redcore brands itself as an “enterprise service browser,” and its clients include several official organs and state-owned enterprises, such as the State Council and the State Grid Corporation.

The startup’s claim was immediately put to the test by netizens, who gave low marks for innovation. On Wednesday, several internet users posted on microblogging site Weibo that after decompressing the installation package using unzip software, they discovered that many of the installation files for AllMobilize’s browser could be traced to Chrome.

Du Cheng, a technology writer from Chinese tech news outlet PingWest, wrote in his latest blog post on Wednesday that he had tested the originality of the Redcore browser, which he described as having a settings interface similar to Google Chrome. Upon closer inspection, Du found that Redcore’s installation package even contained the Chrome file icon, along with the browser’s version number. The file’s properties also showed that its original name was “chrome.exe.”

Redcore’s official Weibo page has been flooded with criticism from outraged netizens, many of whom accuse it of bringing shame to China. “Nice job, so this is the browser you ‘independently developed’ — Google Chrome?” commented one user. One video of a tech-savvy netizen decompressing Redcore’s installation package has been shared over 10,000 times.

As of Wednesday evening, the Redcore browser was no longer available for download from AllMobilize’s website.

Most people access the internet today via one of four browser engines: Trident for Internet Explorer, Gecko for Mozilla Firefox, WebKit for Safari, and Blink for Google Chrome. All four engines are developed by U.S. tech companies. Meanwhile, the most popular “Chinese” browsers — Sogou and Tencent’s 360 — use Chrome’s open-source Blink engine, and have never claimed to be independently developed. But as Sino-U.S. tensions have risen with the threat of an impending trade war, China has been vigorously promoting “independent innovation” to reduce domestic reliance on foreign intellectual property.



AllMobilize’s co-founder and chief operating officer, Gao Jing, responded to the barrage of allegations by saying that while Redcore does indeed “include Chrome inside,” it had not stolen intellectual property, but rather “innovated by standing on the shoulders of giants.” Gao added that Redcore had been well-received by users, and that her company was not using the banner of “domestic innovation” to scam people out of money.

That project is funded by a Hong-Kong based firm and it only get less than $0.5 million from government (thats means nothing in China), so basically it is a nobody project in China, but it still give you get several orgasm already, kind of pathetic...

If I were you, and post all the zillions of funny dotard news in the US like you do here, I would have been died of orgasm already
 
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LOL!! Can they do anything by themselves?

http://www.sixthtone.com/news/1002778/is-chinas-first-homegrown-web-browser-a-google-chrome-ripoff

A startup that claims to have developed China’s first and only fully homegrown web browser raised hundreds of millions of yuan in its latest investment round — but now netizens are saying that its source files appear to have been copied from Google’s widely used web browser, Chrome.

AllMobilize Inc., a Beijing web startup founded in 2012 by entrepreneur Chen Benfeng and Harvard graduate Gao Jing, announced on Wednesday that it had “developed China’s first web browser with fully homegrown core technology and intellectual property, and broken the monopoly of the U.S.” The company calls its browser “Redcore.”

Also in the statement, AllMobilize said that it had raised 250 million yuan ($36 million) in its series C fundraising round from Morningside Venture Capital, IDG Capital, Fortune Venture Capital, and other investors, including several government agencies. Redcore brands itself as an “enterprise service browser,” and its clients include several official organs and state-owned enterprises, such as the State Council and the State Grid Corporation.

The startup’s claim was immediately put to the test by netizens, who gave low marks for innovation. On Wednesday, several internet users posted on microblogging site Weibo that after decompressing the installation package using unzip software, they discovered that many of the installation files for AllMobilize’s browser could be traced to Chrome.

Du Cheng, a technology writer from Chinese tech news outlet PingWest, wrote in his latest blog post on Wednesday that he had tested the originality of the Redcore browser, which he described as having a settings interface similar to Google Chrome. Upon closer inspection, Du found that Redcore’s installation package even contained the Chrome file icon, along with the browser’s version number. The file’s properties also showed that its original name was “chrome.exe.”

Redcore’s official Weibo page has been flooded with criticism from outraged netizens, many of whom accuse it of bringing shame to China. “Nice job, so this is the browser you ‘independently developed’ — Google Chrome?” commented one user. One video of a tech-savvy netizen decompressing Redcore’s installation package has been shared over 10,000 times.

As of Wednesday evening, the Redcore browser was no longer available for download from AllMobilize’s website.

Most people access the internet today via one of four browser engines: Trident for Internet Explorer, Gecko for Mozilla Firefox, WebKit for Safari, and Blink for Google Chrome. All four engines are developed by U.S. tech companies. Meanwhile, the most popular “Chinese” browsers — Sogou and Tencent’s 360 — use Chrome’s open-source Blink engine, and have never claimed to be independently developed. But as Sino-U.S. tensions have risen with the threat of an impending trade war, China has been vigorously promoting “independent innovation” to reduce domestic reliance on foreign intellectual property.



AllMobilize’s co-founder and chief operating officer, Gao Jing, responded to the barrage of allegations by saying that while Redcore does indeed “include Chrome inside,” it had not stolen intellectual property, but rather “innovated by standing on the shoulders of giants.” Gao added that Redcore had been well-received by users, and that her company was not using the banner of “domestic innovation” to scam people out of money.

Typically Chinese setal/rip off someone else's work and claim they made it themselves.
 
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LOL!
Redcore CEO admits ‘100pc China-developed browser’ is built on Google’s Chrome, says writing code from scratch would ‘take many years’

Redcore, which recently raised 250 million yuan (US$36 million) in funding, said on its website that its browser had ‘broken the American monopoly’

https://www.scmp.com/tech/article/2...a-developed-browser-built-googles-chrome-says

Redcore, which recently raised 250 million yuan (US$36 million) in funds, said on its website that its browser had “broken the American monopoly”. That claim was challenged after an online posting purporting to show the installer containing Chrome files went viral.

On Thursday afternoon, Chen Benfeng, founder and chief executive of Redcore, said in an interview at the company’s offices in a technology cluster in northwest Beijing, that it was wrong to have made such a claim.

“We don’t deny building on Chrome’s browser engine,” said Chen, who wore a Nike T-shirt with the “Just Do It” slogan. “The web browser is a very old technology, writing the code from scratch will take many years. It’s like Android was built on the foundation of Linux, but nobody doubts Android or Google’s innovation. Google and Apple also did not write the first line of code, doing so would be reinventing the wheel.”

98c6bf08-a13e-11e8-90bf-ccc49f9b020a_1320x770_062643.jpg


The public climbdown by Redcore is sure to add to the growing debate about China’s overblown technological strength, and draws comparisons to false claims of breakthroughs in the past, including the case of Hanxin, in which a professor sanded down Motorola chips to pass off as his own innovation.

This week, the editor of a Chinese state newspaper said the country’s lack of a scientific spirit was often the underlying reason for problems from weaknesses in research to widespread counterfeiting and fraud.

Liu Yadong, chief editor of Science and Technology Daily, who cited China’s lack of scientific spirit despite a century of trying, had sparked national soul-searching two months ago after criticising the media of hyping up China’s strength in technological innovation.

The reflection had coincided with Beijing’s apparent dialling down of rhetoric on its ambitions for global leadership in advanced technologies amid a trade war with the United States.


The reflection had coincided with Beijing’s apparent dialling down of rhetoric on its ambitions for global leadership in advanced technologies amid a trade war with the United States.

In 2003, Chen Jin, then a professor at Shanghai Jiao Tong University, hogged the headlines with his breakthrough in microchip design, unveiling a digital signal processing chip he dubbed the Hanxin, or Chinese chip, which rhymes with “Chinese soul”.

It did not take long for Hanxin to be exposed as a fraud, when a whistle-blower revealed that Chen had merely sanded down Motorola chips he imported from his former employer to pass off as his own innovation.

Redcore’s Chen, however, said his company’s situation was not comparable with the Hanxin case.

“We help our corporate customers use cloud [computing] in a secure way, adapt smoothly from PC to mobile and store data in an encrypted environment,” he said. “All these are real demand and help improve productivity.”

Chen is a member of China's recruitment programme of global experts known as the “Thousand Talents Plan”.

Redcore specialises in corporate end technology services such as web browser for office environment, anti-hacking protection, auto adaptation for mobile end and encrypted data storage.

It has attracted investors including Morningside Capital, IDG Capital and Fortune Venture Capital.

Shanghai-listed iFlytek, China’s national champion in voice recognition technology, clarified that it was an affiliate of the company that took part in Redcore’s angel round of funding in 2013, an iFlytek spokesman said in a WeChat message in response to an inquiry from the South China Morning Post.

Current users of the Redcore web browser include a number of government bodies and state owned enterprises such as the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of the State Council and China National Chemical Corp, according to a customer list displayed at the entrance of Redcore’s Beijing headquarters.

A day before the social media revelation, Redcore announced that it had raised 250 million yuan in funding from investors including “large listed companies and government customers”.

On Thursday afternoon, the download site for Redcore’s browser was unreachable. Chen said the site was down because of the volume of download requests, not because it was deliberately taken down by the company.

“We know that this is a life-or-death situation for the company. If we don’t clarify properly, there may be no tomorrow,” Chen said. “We will never promote [ourselves like that] again.

“No more ideological or US monopoly stuff. We will be more down-to-earth and focused solely on technology.”
 
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What a surprise! China and copying??? Who would have thought?
 
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chinese company can bring a lot of copyright issues .
 
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