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Google China

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39°59′34″N 116°19′24″E / 39.99278°N 116.32333°E / 39.99278; 116.32333

Google China
Company typePrivate (subsidiary of Google)
IndustryInternet, Computer software
Founded2005
FounderKai-Fu Lee
Headquarters,
Area served
China
ParentGoogle
Websitewww.google.cn

Google China (谷歌, pinyin: gǔ gē, literally meaning "valley song" or "crop song", though it is a transliteration) is the Chinese subsidiary of Google, Inc., as of 2007 the world's largest Internet search engine company.

History

Google China was founded in 2005 and is headed by Kai-Fu Lee, formerly a Microsoft executive and the founder in 1998 of Microsoft Research Asia. Microsoft sued Google and Kai-Fu Lee for the move but reached a confidential settlement.[1] The office was initially located at NCL Tower and later moved to Tsinghua Science Park in early 2006. The newest office has been in use since September 2006. It is a 10-floor building located in Tsinghua Science Park, near the south gate of Tsinghua University.

Business

Google China headquarters in Tsinghua Science Park, Beijing

Google China serves a market of Chinese Internet users that was estimated in June 2007 to include over 162 million people.[2] This estimate is up from 45.8 million in June 2002, according to a survey report from the China Internet Network Information Center (CNNIC) released on June 30, 2002.[3] A CNNIC report published a year and a half earlier, on January 17, 2001, estimated that the mainland Chinese Internet user base numbered 22.5 million people; this was considerably higher than the number published by Iamasia, a private Internet ratings company.[4] The first CNNIC report, published on October 10, 1997, estimated the number of Chinese internet users at fewer than 650 thousand people.

The competitors of Google China include Baidu.com, often called the "Google of China" due to its resemblance and similarity to Google.[citation needed]

Controversy

Prior to Google China's establishment, Google.com itself was accessible, even though it was not reliable. According to official statistics, it was accessible 90% of the time, and a number of services were not available at all.[5]

Since announcing its intent to comply with Internet censorship laws in the People's Republic of China, Google China has been the focus of controversy over what critics view as capitulation to the "Golden Shield Project" (also known as the Great Firewall of China). Because of its self-imposed censorship, whenever people search for interdicted Chinese keywords on a blocked list maintained by the PRC government, google.cn will display the following at the bottom of the page (translated): In accordance with local laws, regulations and policies, part of the search result is not shown.

Google has argued that it can play a role more useful to the cause of free speech by participating in China's IT industry than by refusing to comply and being denied admission to the Chinese market. "While removing search results is inconsistent with Google's mission, providing no information (or a heavily degraded user experience that amounts to no information) is more inconsistent with our mission," a statement said.[6]

A PBS analysis reported clear differences between results returned for controversial keywords by the censored and uncensored search engines.[7] According to The New York Times, Google has set up computer systems inside China that try to access Web sites outside the country. If a site is inaccessible (e.g., due to the Golden Shield Project), then it is added to Google China's blacklist.[8]

In February 2006, Sergey Brin, Google's co-founder, was quoted as saying virtually all the Google users in China were using the non-censored version of their website.[9]

Google critics in the United States claim that Google China is a flagrant violation of the Google motto, "Don't be evil".[citation needed]

On April 9, 2007, Google China spokesman Cui Jin admitted that the pinyin Google IME "was built leveraging some non-Google database resources", this was in response to a request on April 6th from the Chinese search engine company Sohu that Google stop distributing its pinyin Input Method Editor software due to the fact it allegedly copied portions from Sohu's own software.[10]

In early 2008, Guo Quan (郭泉), a university professor who had been dismissed after having founded a democratic opposition party, announced plans to sue Yahoo! and Google in the United States for having blocked his name from search results in China.[11]

References

  1. ^ CNET News.com: Microsoft settles with Google over executive hire (December 22, 2005)
  2. ^ Reutuers. "China govt centre says 162 mln Internet users." Reutuers, July 19, 2007.
  3. ^ Ministry of Culture, China. "How Many Internet Users Are There in China?." ChinaCulture.org, 2003.
  4. ^ China Internet Information Center. "How Many Internet Users Are There in China?." China Internet Information Center (china.org.cn), February 8, 2001.
  5. ^ Official Google Blog: Google in China, January 27, 2006.
  6. ^ BBC News. "Google censors itself for China." BBC News, January 25, 2006.
  7. ^ FRONTLINE: the tank man: A Sampling of What's Censored/Filtered PBS
  8. ^ Google's China Problem (and China's Google Problem), p8
  9. ^ [http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/news/archive/2006/06/06/financial/f161937D58.DTL Brin Says Google Compromised Principles ]
  10. ^ Lemon, Sumner (2007-04-08). "Rival Asks Google to Yank 'Copycat' Application". PC World. IDG. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); line feed character in |work= at position 4 (help)
  11. ^ Times Online. "Dissident Chinese professor to sue Yahoo! and Google for erasing his name" February 6, 2008