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== Bypassing Chinese censorship ==
== Bypassing Chinese censorship ==
[[New Scientist|''New Scientist Magazine'']] reported in December 2002 that the site had become popular in [[China]], where the locals were prevented from accessing the normal Google site and other popular [[search engines]] because of the [[Internet censorship in mainland China|Internet censorship practices of the Chinese government]].<ref>{{cite web
Nick Alexander reported in December 2002 that the site had become popular in [[China]], where the locals were prevented from accessing the normal Google site and other popular [[search engines]] because of the [[Internet censorship in mainland China|Internet censorship practices of the Chinese government]].<ref>{{cite web
| url = http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn2768
| url = http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn2768
| title = Google mirror beats Great Firewall of China
| title = Google mirror beats Great Firewall of China

Revision as of 17:02, 11 February 2008

File:Elgoog Logo.gif
elgooG logo

elgooG is a mirror image (a horizontally-flipped version) of the Google search engine. The page and all results are displayed in reverse. The site is called the "google mirror" as a parody of the term mirror in computing, which usually refers to a copy or backup of another website. The site was created by a group called All Too Flat, who put up various comedy and satire pages on their website. To search on this search engine, you must type in the keywords backwards for it to understand what you are searching for.

Bypassing Chinese censorship

Nick Alexander reported in December 2002 that the site had become popular in China, where the locals were prevented from accessing the normal Google site and other popular search engines because of the Internet censorship practices of the Chinese government.[1]

However, the elgooG mirror was not capable of handling variable-width character encodings or double-byte character encodings (including Big5, GBK/GB 18030/GB 2312, ISO 2022, and other character encodings used to encode the Chinese character set); many Chinese users were restricted to pages using encodings that use only a single byte per character such as ASCII, ISO 8859, and other ASCII extensions.

References

  1. ^ "Google mirror beats Great Firewall of China". New Scientist Magazine. 2002-12-06. Retrieved 2007-01-23.

External links