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Venture capitalists like Zhou and the Chinese entrepreneurs they’re backing are now facing what could be their biggest risk-tolerance test yet. On Jan. 31, the government will implement new regulations that potentially could put China’s nascent Internet video industry out of business. Under the new rules, a company showing online videos from inside China will need a license, and only a state-owned or state-controlled Chinese company will be eligible to receive one.
That is causing big worries among China’s private-sector Internet startups. %26quot;A lot of people are very concerned,%26quot; says Gary Wang, the founder and chief executive officer of Tudou, a Shanghai-based YouTube-like site backed by IDG and several other venture-capital firms. %26quot;If you take [the regulation] literally, it means the Chinese state has to own the whole Chinese Internet,%26quot; he says.
Big Backing from Venture CapitalistsUntil now, startups like Tudou have benefited from growing interest among foreign VCs looking for the next big thing in China. For instance, on Nov. 26, Beijing video-sharing site Youku announced it had raised $25 million from Brookside Capital, an affiliate of Bain Capital, and three existing investors%26mdash;Sutter Hill Ventures of Palo Alto, Farallon Capital of San Francisco, and Shanghai-based Chengwei Ventures.
Youku rival 56.com has raised an undisclosed sum from investors, including Silicon Valley heavyweight Sequoia Capital and Steamboat Ventures, the VC arm of Walt Disney (DIS). And last April, Tudou raised $19 million from IDG, General Catalyst Partners of Cambridge, Mass.; Jafco in Tokyo, and Granite Global in the Silicon Valley.








