China's market regulator said on Friday that it had launched an antitrust investigation into China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), the country's largest academic database.
The State Administration for Market Supervision (SAMR) said in a statement on its website that based on preliminary probe, a lawsuit had been filed against CNKI's suspected monopolistic practices.
CNKI's parent company, Tongfang Knowledge Network Technology Co., Ltd. (Beijing), said in a statement posted on its official WeChat account on Friday that it will fully cooperate with the investigation. "We will deeply reflect ourselves ... and take the social responsibility as a knowledge infrastructure," read the statement.
CNKI website offers services including online searches and downloads of most of China's academic journals, doctoral dissertations and masters' theses.
The latest move by the SAMR came after the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), the country's top research institute, said last month that it would stop using the database from April 20 this year because of its high subscription fees.
CNKI has been in hot water after a screenshot of an email from the CAS condemning the high subscription fees charged by CNKI went viral on China's social media platforms in April. It said the fees had reached over 10 million yuan (about $1.6 million) last year and the organization could no longer afford to bear the cost.
The CAS said it had been using the services of CNKI since 2008, but CNKI had been raising the fees at a quite fast pace every year by virtue of its dominant position in the market.
"In 2022, the two sides had active discussions in terms of the fees and subscription models. But after many rounds of arduous negotiations, CNKI still insisted on a renewal fee close to 10 million yuan," the CAS email said.
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