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One Word, Son: China.com
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You might have thought the biggest winner on Wall Street in the wake of the
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United States and China's agreement on terms for China to enter the World Trade
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Organization would have been the company that's been loudest in its support for
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Chinese entry, namely Boeing. But in what may be yet another sign of the advent
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of an economy based on bits and not atoms--or at least of the mainstream
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acceptance of the idea of that economy--the biggest winner today, by
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far, was (what a shock!) an Internet company. Chinese-language content provider
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China.com's shares rose 75 percent today on news of the accord, raising the
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company's market cap to $2 billion.
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China.com went public as a Nasdaq stock--meaning that its actual shares
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trade on the Nasdaq, as opposed to what are called American depositary
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receipts--in July, and its shares have now risen more than fourfold. The leap
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today was prompted by one of China's key concessions to the United States, to
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allow foreign equity investment--up to 50 percent--in both Chinese-owned
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telecommunications companies and Internet companies. This was a pretty
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significant about-face, considering that just two months ago, the Chinese
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government took a public stand against foreign involvement in the Chinese
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Internet industry, and that many thought that the government would draw a line
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around the Net, even if it conceded on telecom. Today's concessions open the
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door to myriad partnerships--how far off can AOL China be?--and the idea seems
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to be that China.com has a key foothold in the market.
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When you consider that China.com has only 750,000 registered users in a
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country of more than a billion people, calling its foothold "key" seems rather
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dubious. But the truth is that it's next to impossible to think about business
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in China in free-market terms. In a real market, brands are vulnerable, and
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first-mover advantages--like the ones that Compuserve and Prodigy had in
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Internet access in the United States, for example--can be lost as a result of
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competition. But in a market in which political connections remain essential
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and state intervention can come at any time, a first-mover advantage, insofar
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as it seems to reflect state sanction, if not support, appears to be rather
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more significant.
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The paradox inherent in all of this, of course, is that the Internet really
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is an incredibly destabilizing technology, both economically and politically,
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and yet the Chinese government is doing its best to hold it fixed, even though
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holding it fixed (if that's possible) is the best way to destroy its value. The
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viral spread of information on the Internet, the incredibly rapid and
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inexpensive growth of user communities and businesses, the facilitation of
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global market relationships: These are the hallmarks of the Net--not merely in
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the minds of the digerati but also in the minds of investors. They're the only
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things that make a company like Yahoo worth $50 billion or a company like
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China.com worth $2 billion. Yet these are the things--even after today's
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accord--for which the Chinese government has very little affection.
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The romantic idea is that the combination of real free trade, the Internet,
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and modern telecommunications will eventually bring down the hidebound
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political and economic structures that still rule China. Now, the romantic idea
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may be right, and greater access to the Net and greater free trade are
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certainly good things. But the truth, banal as it may seem, is that we still
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don't really know very much about how the potentially democratizing Internet
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really functions in a thoroughly undemocratic society, just as we don't really
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know very much about how the market-revolutionizing Internet functions in a
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non-capitalist economy. Obviously, if the romantic idea is right, the upside is
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so immense that today's $750 million rise in China.com's market cap will be a
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mere drop in the bucket. But in a way the company's name is the perfect
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conjoining of two words--China and .com--whose real value lies not in what is
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but only (always?) in what may be.
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