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Report: Google might close Chinese operations next month

ICT Materials 19 March 2010 09:53 (UTC +04:00)
US internet giant Google Inc might close its operations in China next month after a row over a hacking attack that apparently originated in China, a state media report said Friday, dpa reported.
Report: Google might close Chinese operations next month

US internet giant Google Inc might close its operations in China next month after a row over a hacking attack that apparently originated in China, a state media report said Friday, dpa reported.

   The Shanghai-based China Business News quoted an executive with an unidentified advertising agency linked to Google as saying the US firm had decided to "pull out" of China from April 10.

   The newspaper also quoted an unnamed China-based Google employee as saying the company might announce its decision Monday.

   The report did not say if any withdrawal would involve only the closure of Google's main Chinese website or include the ending of other operations in China.

   Last week, the Chinese government warned Google that it would have to "bear the consequence" if it went ahead with a threat to stop censoring search results in China, which has strict government controls on the internet.

   It was not clear if the two sides had held talks since Google announced plans in January to review its operations in China.

   The Wall Street Journal quoted Google chief executive Eric Schmidt as saying last week that the company was in "active negotiations" with the Chinese government, but Chinese officials declined to confirm that any talks had taken place.

   Google's chief legal officer, David Drummond, announced in January that the company planned to stop self-censoring its Chinese search engine even if that meant abandoning China's market.

   Drummond said Google took the unprecedented step after discovering "a highly sophisticated and targeted attack on our corporate infrastructure originating from China" that took place in December.

   China has what is known as the "great firewall," which prevent the country's internet users from accessing hundreds of websites that are deemed politically sensitive, pornographic or otherwise problematic.

   The government issues strict rules for "self-regulation" of internet service providers and employs thousands of people to monitor online activity.

   To counter China's policy, Drummond said in Paris last week that the world had reached a "critical point" in the future of the internet.

   "All of us have a choice," he said at the award of the first Netizen Prize by the Paris-based rights group Reporters Without Borders.

   "We can allow repressive policies to take flight and spread across the globe, or we can work together against such challenges and uphold the fundamental human right to free expression," Drummond said.

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