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Google.cn Still Remains In China

hackingbear writes "Google appears to be content to remain in China doing business as usual while it finds a way to work within the system, according to one of the search giant's founders. This despite a strong statement 30 days ago that it would stop censoring search results in China and possibly pull its business out of that country. And the company is still unwilling to confirm or deny if the alleged attacks were carried out by the Chinese government. 'I don't actually think the question of whether [the attacks were performed by] the Chinese government is that important,' Brin said. (That's the difference between state-sponsor vs. individual hacking. Why is that not important?) In the mean time, shortly after we celebrated google.cn lifting censorship, the exact same censorship has been quietly re-enabled as proved by this Chinese search query on June 4, despite the lack of any concrete actions by the Chinese government, which has so far made only useless general and standard statements on the matter."

4 of 103 comments (clear)

  1. Too expensive to not be evil by hobbes75 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Obviously not being evil is too expensive... maybe that explains the amount of evil in the world in general.

  2. Bad Move by UndyingShadow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The quickest thing Google can do to lose the confidence of its users is be Two-Faced. With all the recent privacy concerns, if Google starts acting one way after saying "Don't be Evil," it's going to make everyone question if Google can be trusted. Can they?

  3. Mixed results by Arancaytar · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's true that the tank man does not rank number one on "tiananmen" as it does on google.com - but if I type tiananmen into the search box, the top suggestions are

    tiananmen square protest
    tiananmen square 1989
    tiananmen square tank
    tiananmen tank
    tiananmen square tank man
    tiananmen tank man

    And if I make the search more specific by adding "tank", I do get a few copies of the infamously censored image on page 1, even on Google.cn.

    Of course, I haven't digged this deeply before, so I don't know if the censorship was always this half-assed.

  4. Re:That didn't take long. by sopssa · · Score: 5, Funny

    Who really thought that?

    Of course they aren't going to pull out. People here are like the 18 year old girls who seriously trust that their boyfriend is going to pull out just before instead of cumming in.