The incident has been covered in the state-owned press, in both English and Chinese. Xinhua's English website republished a China Daily story about the black rain, and illustrated it with photos credited to search engine Baidu, which probably means they were found using a Baidu search, and could come from just about anywhere. The photo reproduced here is from the Xinhua web page.
Meanwhile, an opinion piece in the China Daily asks: Does democracy exist in China?
The article talks about the government's recent release of a white paper about democracy, arguing that the document is worth reading:
The reading process may be a little tedious considering the prevalence of unfamiliar political jargon. But ample rewards are guaranteed - you will find out what democracy means in terms of official Chinese political ideology, and how democracy - the Chinese brand - is practised.
Hmm, The Chinese Brand of Democracy. The reading process may be a little tedious.
I think I prefer Socialism with Chinese Characteristics, but then as Jiang Zemin was fond of saying, one must move with the times (与时俱进).
The image reproduced here is from a Xinhua photo gallery called Bai Ling on lingerie ads which comprises photos scanned from Stuff, which may be described as a babes and gadgets lads magazine.
Other interesting stuff on Xinhua today:
The People's Liberation Army (PLA) ... has opened a website to publicize its military material procurement work and ensure its transparency......The PLA procurement network ... is said to be the only website of its type, aims to provide a platform between military material suppliers and buyers with the aim of "integrity, fairness and openness".
The website is buggy, and the section that is supposed to contain details of current tenders and contracts is empty. Perhaps it's just a PR gimmick connected with U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's visit to China earlier this week.
Previously, clicking on an MP3 search result would download the file directly, but now it leads you to a page containing the warning translated below:
Baidu MP3 warns you: At the request of the user, the Baidu search engine system will automatically provide links to third party web pages without human assistance. "Baidu" does not store, control, edit, or modify the information on the linked third party web pages. Baidu highly respects the protection of intellectual property rights, and has established a principle of taking measures that work toward the legal benefits of protected rights holders. Should the rights holder send to Baidu a "rights notice," Baidu will take steps according to the law to remove relevant content or hide relevant links. Please see Baidu's copyright statement.
It's unclear whether this strategy will work - Baidu is essentially taking their courtroom argument and clarifying it for their users, but nothing has fundamentally changed in the areas the record companies are displeased with.