CYBER WARS
Man pours water on Baidu CEO at AI conference
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) July 3, 2019

A man burst on to a stage and poured water over the head of Baidu CEO Robin Li as the founder of China's dominant search engine spoke at a company-sponsored event on Artificial Intelligence on Wednesday.

Highly visible public acts of defiance are relatively rare in China's big cities where security measures can be tight and celebrities like Li generally travel with a pack of security.

Baidu has faced enormous criticism in China in recent years after a medical advertising scandal and discontent with changes to its search result listings that favour its own content.

Li was telling the crowd about Baidu's autonomous car development as he opened the two-day tech conference, when the man sauntered up on stage and dumped a bottle of water on his head.

It appeared to catch Li off guard and he stood stunned and unmoving for a second as the water poured down.

"What's your problem?" Li said in English to the individual as he walked off stage.

The incident, which lasted only a few seconds, initially seemed to be part of the presentation until event security intervened to cart off the man.

"Everyone can see that the path of advancing AI will still encounter all types of things we don't expect," said Li, with a wet face and drenched white shirt, while calmly resuming his presentation to applause.

Security for the event started light with few personnel visible in the conference room prior to the incident, but security guards soon filled in to stand at the end of each row of the audience.

Baidu issued a statement the incident that echoed Li's on-stage reaction, but it did not give any details about the individual or what happened to him afterwards.

Baidu has had a rough year posting its first quarterly loss since going public in 2005 during the first quarter, with the head of its core search business also resigning.


Related Links
Cyberwar - Internet Security News - Systems and Policy Issues

CYBER WARS
Trump move to ease Huawei sanctions sparks anger, confusion
Washington (AFP) July 1, 2019
The US trade war truce with China which could ease sanctions on Huawei has prompted a backlash from lawmakers over national security concerns amid confusion over how the deal may impact the Chinese tech giant. In the weekend agreement with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping to resume negotiations and hold off on new tariffs, US President Donald Trump suggested a potentially softer position on Huawei, a sticking point in the trade war. White House economic advisor Larry Kudlow said Sunday there's ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

CYBER WARS
Sweden deploys new air defence missile system on Baltic island

Erdogan confident Turkey will avoid US sanctions over S-400s

Japan to test infrared sensors for early warning satellites

Turkey unafraid of US sanctions over S-400 deal: minister

CYBER WARS
US says investigating missile find at Libya rebel base

Stray 'Russian-made missile' suspected of hitting northern Cyprus

Lockheed nets $561.8M for tactical missiles for Bahrain, Poland, Romania

Turkey's Erdogan says S-400s delivery for early July

CYBER WARS
AFRL XQ-58A UAV completes second successful flight

Russia Tests Satellite-Based Radar Capable of Detecting Low-Flying Drones

New energy-efficient algorithm keeps UAV swarms helping longer

Low-cost Valkyrie unmanned aircraft completes second test flight

CYBER WARS
AEHF-5 encapsulated and prepared for launch

Corps begins fielding mobile satellite communication system

AFRL demonstrates world's first daytime free-space quantum communication enabled by adaptive optics

Harris to build new satellite connection system prototype for USAF

CYBER WARS
Air Force rolls out new medical model to minimize troop downtime

The US Army's plans to fill urgent capability gaps in 2019

GenDyn gets $16.2M contract for Abrams M1A1 tank tech support

U.S. Army changes recruitment approach with new advertising agency

CYBER WARS
Erdogan says NATO countries shouldn't sanction each other over S400s

BAE awarded $90M to upgrade, maintain Navy's communications and combat systems

US Senate votes to block Saudi arms sales, UK suspends licenses

New Pentagon chief an ex-soldier who moved to the defense industry

CYBER WARS
Canada's opposition calls for tougher China stance

Uighur leader urges G20 pressure to end China 'genocide'

Vatican urges China not to intimidate underground Catholics

Chinese jets buzz Canadian navy; Xi agrees to Japan state visit; Chinese military to dock in HK

CYBER WARS
Monitoring the lifecycle of tiny catalyst nanoparticles

Fast and selective optical heating for functional nanomagnetic metamaterials

2D gold quantum dots are atomically tunable with nanotubes

Harnessing microorganisms for smart microsystems