»¶ÓÄú·ÃÎÊ52ijÓ¢ºº»¥ÒëÍø£¬½ñÌìС±àΪÄã·ÖÏíµÄÓ¢Óï֪ʶÊÇ£º¡¾É¶£¿´«ÑÔÁ³Æ×Íø½«Óë°Ù¶ÈºÏ×÷½ø×¤Öйú£¡¡¿£¬ÏÂÃæÊÇÏêϸµÄ·ÖÏí£¡
ɶ£¿´«ÑÔÁ³Æ×Íø½«Óë°Ù¶ÈºÏ×÷½ø×¤Öйú£¡

Chinese search engine Baidu.com and Facebook have already signed an agreement to introduce world's largest social networking service into China, Sohu.com reported citing a source close to Baidu.com.¾ÝËѺüÍø±¨µÀ£¬¹úÄÚµÄËÑË÷ÒýÇæ¾ÞÍ·°Ù¶ÈÒѾºÍÁ³Æ×Íø£¨Facebook£©Ç©ÊðºÏ×÷ÐÒ飬ȫÇò×î´óµÄÉç½»ÍøÂ罫Õýʽ½ø×¤Öйú¡£
It is believed the new social networking service will not be integrated completely with Facebook.com, and the timetable of the new SNS is yet to be confirmed.ÏûÏ¢³Æ£¬FacebookºÍ°Ù¶ÈºÏ×÷½¨Á¢µÄÍøÕ¾½«²»»áÓëFacebook.com´òͨ£¬¶øÊǻὨÁ¢Ò»¸öеÄSNSÍøÕ¾£¬µ«Ä¿Ç°£¬¸ÃÍøÕ¾ÍÆ³öµÄʱ¼äÉÐδȷ¶¨¡£
However, Baidu's spokesman Kaiser Kuo told China Daily on Monday that "No comments on rumors."°Ù¶È·¢ÑÔÈ˹ùâù¹ã£¨Kaiser Kuo£©½ÓÊÜÖйúÈÕ±¨Íø²É·Ãʱ±íʾ£¬²»»á¶Ô´«ÑÔ½øÐÐÆÀÂÛ¡£

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg was pictured touring Chinese internet companies in December last year fuelling speculation a deal was being negotiated. ÔçÔÚÈ¥Äê12Ô£¬Facebook´´Ê¼ÈËMark Zuckerberg¾Í±»Åĵ½·ÃÎÊÁ˶à¸öÖйúµÄ»¥ÁªÍø¹«Ë¾£¬Òý·¢Íâ½ç²Â²â£¬ºÏ×÷Ǣ̸ÕýÔÚ½øÐÐÖС£
- ÆÀÂÛÁÐ±í£¨ÍøÓÑÆÀÂÛ½ö¹©ÍøÓѱí´ï¸öÈË¿´·¨£¬²¢²»±íÃ÷±¾Õ¾Í¬ÒâÆä¹Ûµã»ò֤ʵÆäÃèÊö£©
-
