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Google Readying To Pull Out of China

Sagelinka writes "Both Google and the Chinese government appear to be leaking word that the search firm may soon shutter its operations there as negotiations between the two break down. Google first threatened to halt its operations in China after disclosing in January that an attack on its network from inside China was aimed at exposing the Gmail accounts of Chinese human rights activists. At the time, Google also said it was reconsidering its willingness to censor search results of users in China as required by the government. 'I think Google thought China would be flexible,' said Rob Enderle, an analyst with the Enderle Group. Google has since been negotiating with the Chinese government to find a way to continue operating in the country. Google did not respond today to requests for comment on the state of the negotiations with China."

53 of 343 comments (clear)

  1. Never should have been there by SputnikPanic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Good. Google should never have made that devil's bargain in the first place.

    1. Re:Never should have been there by c++0xFF · · Score: 3

      It seems to me that they were looking for an excuse to leave, and the hacking provided exactly that.

    2. Re:Never should have been there by lyinhart · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It seems to me that they were looking for an excuse to leave, and the hacking provided exactly that.

      Don't know about that. China's got millions and millions of potential Google users in a fast developing market. Google probably wanted to be there and wanted to stay, but not on the (probably unfair) terms of Chinese government.

      --
      Freedom is drinking a beer in the park when you're supposed to be at work.
    3. Re:Never should have been there by Aqualung812 · · Score: 2

      I see the point you're trying to make, but the difference between censoring a mash up of Smurfs and StarWars on YouTube and blocking access to human rights organizations is like the difference between me saying your momma is fat versus raping her.

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    4. Re:Never should have been there by c++0xFF · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Sorry. Re-reading my statement it seems that I was too quick to submit -- that's not quite what I meant to say. And the result is that the comment got modded as a troll.

      I don't have a reference or any reputable source -- only an inkling or gut feeling.

      What it comes down to is Google stopped censoring results (admitting that google.cn will probably be shut down) because of a hacking attempt. This reasoning always seemed a bit dubious to me.

      Google doesn't have many ways of getting back at the Chinese government: refusing to censor is one of the few. More to the point is that it provided a means to make waves in China: "If you're not going to play by the rules, neither will we!"

      So, yeah. Maybe an excuse to "leave" isn't quite what I should have said. Let me edit my statement:

      It seems to me that they were looking for an excuse to threaten to leave.

    5. Re:Never should have been there by rwa2 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well, here are the Google blog posts mulling over China both then and now:
      http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2006/01/google-in-china.html
      http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2010/01/new-approach-to-china.html

      So essentially they'll be turning the clock back to 2006, where the Chinese had access to the unfiltered, international version of Google and were more painfully aware of its government's censorship effects.

      I'm mostly interested in how much Google actually follows through on their threat. It would still be an interesting PR move if they do (good or bad press is still press), but I'm sure they'll leave some tendrils there. More interesting and depressing if historians come back to this point in time and say this was some major event that lead to a much bigger rift between the East and the West.

    6. Re:Never should have been there by severoon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      My uninformed opinion about this is that Google made the deal in the first place because they recognize the difference between the Chinese government and the Chinese people, and after doing the calculus on it they reasoned that the overall benefit to the people was worth dealing with the government's rules, provided they didn't get too overt with it. I'm sure they also figured into it: once the people get a taste of a great search engine, and it gets taken away, they know what they're missing. If Google never goes in in the first place, they have no alternative but to believe what the government tells them, that Baidu is the best, yadda yadda.

      --
      but have you considered the following argument: shut up.
    7. Re:Never should have been there by d'fim · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Google is a "very valuable tool" for citizens' discontent with the government.

      Not after Google complies with the demands of the Chinese government.
      That seems to be the part that you're not getting.

      Google cannot win (i.e. help people more than Google has in the past).
      Google cannot stay even (i.e. help people the same amount as Google has in the past).
      Google can only capitulate to evil (i.e. help no one but the Chinese government) or leave (i.e. help the Chinese government).

      Google is boxed into helping the Chinese government either way, but one way requires compliance with evil and the other does not.

      --
      Adherence to the truth is a form of disloyalty.
    8. Re:Never should have been there by blueskies · · Score: 2, Informative

      China just wants to control everything because there nation is developing faster then they anticipated.

      You mean like when they tried to control everything during the Great Leap Forward by killing and jailing hundreds of thousands of people? Killing all of your scholars really helped make the nation develop slower.

      Or are you talking about squashing unarmed protesters? Or are you talking about squashing unarmed protesters?

    9. Re:Never should have been there by Aqualung812 · · Score: 3, Informative
      You might want to read a little more:

      Eyewitness reporter Charlie Cole believes that the man was taken away by secret police and was just one of the many executed in the aftermath of the military crackdown, since the Chinese government was never able to produce him after the images became public.

      No, he wasn't run over, he was made a nonperson. That doesn't make me feel any better about it.

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    10. Re:Never should have been there by Zarel · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You parrot the old Google party line about why they stayed in China for so long pretty well.

      But Google seems to be changing its line, albeit somewhat grudgingly. One might conclude that they were rationalizing the decision to stay where the money was even though they had to knowingly act against their stated values to do it; later found that you get burned when you shake the devil's hand; and now are trying to reconcile that with the fact that really they do still want access to all that money.

      One might otherwise conclude that they were doing much good by staying, but the PR problems of the West unexpectedly and hypocritically blaming them were just too much for them to handle.

      You seem to be implying that I'm some sort of Google apologist. I'm not. I'm just someone who wants to use Google, but soon won't be able to, since people like you seem to think your right to feel self-righteous outweighs my right to use a quality search engine that tells me when it censors results, and fights the Chinese government to keep as much of its data private as possible.

      What an ignorant attitude. Of course human rights abuses are not "A-OK". The first moral responsibility on the matter, though, is to make sure you yourself aren't committing them. Doing what you can to make the world as a whole better - e.g. by opposing those violations you aren't involved with - is important but secondary.

      Later in your post you brought up an analogy to a doctor who can't save everyone. In your context, it was a twisted stretch of an analogy; but here it's actually pretty apt, as doctors swear an oath to "first do no harm".

      Google staying in China is not like a doctor who can't save everyone; it's like a guy who profits by killing some patients justifying it by pointing to the few he also saves.

      Google pulling out of China is like a doctor. He says "first I will do no harm - I will not help China with its censorship efforts even if that means China won't let me operate in its borders"; and then perhaps he tries to save as many as he can. But as you say, he can't save everyone, and we do not hold him morally accountable for the misdeeds of others once he commits to do no harm himself.

      See, it doesn't work like that.

      Google staying in China is more like a doctor trying a treatment with side effects (aka practically every treatment in existence). "First do no harm" is better rendered as "first do no net harm." If you're helping people more than you're hurting them, it's difficult to argue that you're hurting them in the first place. Google pulling out of China is a doctor saying, "I refuse to give you this life-saving treatment because it might give you a cold."

      This is why Good Samaritan laws exist, since you Americans otherwise don't seem to understand that it's impossible to help someone without hurting them in some minor way.

      I notice that you still haven't answered my question. Does anyone other than the Chinese government benefit from Google pulling out? You haven't answered it because the answer is "no", and no matter how much hand-waving you do about being "complicit" or whatever, the answer will still be "no".

      Is it really worth causing harm to Chinese citizens, just so you can say "I'm not the one doing it"? Google pulling out of China is harming Chinese people, but all you care about is that Google isn't "complicit" in some irrelevant philosophical sense.

      --
      Want a high quality FOSS RTS game? Try Warzone 2100!
    11. Re:Never should have been there by Zarel · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That seems to be the part that you're not getting.

      Google cannot win (i.e. help people more than Google has in the past).
      Google cannot stay even (i.e. help people the same amount as Google has in the past).
      Google can only capitulate to evil (i.e. help no one but the Chinese government) or leave (i.e. help the Chinese government).

      Google is boxed into helping the Chinese government either way, but one way requires compliance with evil and the other does not.

      Man, if only that were true, then it'd be great that Google is pulling out! Too bad it isn't.

      Google cannot bring True Democracy (tm) and Complete Freedom (tm) to China. They also can't give everyone a pony. Does that mean they should just take their ball and go home?

      Tell me, why can't Google "win"? Why can't Google "stay even"? And how, exactly, is staying in China "capitulating to evil" and "helping no one but the Chinese government"?

      The way the situation currently is, Google has two choices.

      1. Leave China. This, as you've noted, helps no one but the Chinese government.
      2. Stay in China. This gives Chinese citizens a choice, which is never a bad thing (inapplicable exceptions notwithstanding).

      Google tells citizens when their search results are censored, which no other search engine does. This is the only situation I know of in which the sentence, "The Chinese government is forcing us to censor this" appears written in Chinese on the internet, without euphemisms. And you think that should go away?

      Google also protects the privacy of its data. No one really knows what goes on between the Chinese government and the other search engines, but I'm sure they'll give up server logs and other data without question. Google, on the other hand, is usually quite good about fighting government orders to turn over their data, and they generally make it known when they are being forced to hand over their data.

      Google is also a damn good search engine, and if they leave, I'll have to use Bing or Baidu or something.

      And you want to give all that up, just so you can feel a bit more self-righteous?

      Correction: You don't give up anything. You want other people to give all that up, just so you can feel a bit more self-righteous?

      --
      Want a high quality FOSS RTS game? Try Warzone 2100!
  2. I'm sure Bing will take their place by spun · · Score: 4, Insightful

    After all, Microsoft never signed a 'do no evil' clause.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    1. Re:I'm sure Bing will take their place by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      In fact, such a clause would run entirely counter to their whole operation.

    2. Re:I'm sure Bing will take their place by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Pretty sure Baidu's 60+% market share is going to hold in China...

    3. Re:I'm sure Bing will take their place by Zocalo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Someone else is already a virtual monopoly in China. Baidu is by far and away the most popular search engine in China and even Google is essentially an also ran, while Bing and Yahoo are barely above the level of being statistical noise.

      --
      UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
    4. Re:I'm sure Bing will take their place by cyfer2000 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Nov. 2009 data showed Baidu was 62.2% and Google was 14.1%, alibaba 5%, tencent 5%, MS 5%.

      --
      There is a spark in every single flame bait point.
    5. Re:I'm sure Bing will take their place by recrudescence · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's obvious you're not a doctor ...

      I wouldn't think twice sending that patient to another doctor.
      If they're dumb enough to demand an unnecessarily high-risk procedure, I'd advise them against it and offer the alternatives, and if they still wanted it, I'd explain why I wouldn't feel comfortable offering it to them. I agree, the shitty doctor who is willing to perform it may cause more harm. But, the patient is bent to be massacred in one way or another anyway, and at least I won't be the one who gets his ass dragged to court trying to defend myself on why I performed a procedure that goes against all clinical and ethical guidelines and clearly fails the Bolam principle.

    6. Re:I'm sure Bing will take their place by spooje · · Score: 2, Insightful
      You read my mind. "Do no evil" is a good mantra for Google, but it also means they will lose business in China, and somebody else will gain a virtually monopoly as the "default" search engine - namely Microsoft. So come 2020 we'll have a divided world where Google is the #1 search engine in America/Europe and MS Bing will be #1 in China and its protectorates.

      No, Baidu will be the default search engine. Oh, but wait it already is!

      It's not as if Google didn't try to dominate the market in China, but the government interfering in their products and the locals just plain liking Baidu better they couldn't. You're also confusing google.cn with other products like Gmail and google apps. Google.cn is what's being shut down because it's the only legal business google has here. The Chinese government has no control over what happens on google.com and can't censor any search results because they come from the US.

      If Google shuts down google.cn then the Chinese government will probably retaliate and block google.com, but they are two completely different things.

      --
      Tea and kung-fu. Life is good. Rising Phoenix
  3. Yahoo/Microsoft by _PimpDaddy7_ · · Score: 2, Insightful

    and I'm sure Microsoft and Yahoo will be more than willing to fill in any gaps...

  4. China by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Frankly, I'm suprised Chinese officials didn't have any Google employees executed over this.

  5. Posturing? by C_Kode · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I think this is only posturing on Google's part. While China isn't a huge profit machine right now for them, access to 1.3B Internet users will be a big deal down the road.

    If they step aside, they will only be opening the door for the growth of Bing. Since search is probably 99% of their income, giving way to a competitor is not something they want to be doing.

    I highly doubt Google folds up shop in China.

    1. Re:Posturing? by DarthVain · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Emphasis on "down the road."

      1) Google makes ALL its money through Ad revenue.

      2) 1.3B Internet users does not equal 1.3B consumers

      3) For the most part China still exports most of its goods.

      Much of China is undeveloped. While many are moving to urban areas and earning a wage, many wouldn't have what we would describe as "disposable" income.

      There are a new class of people in China that can certainly afford "stuff", however that number is much much less that the total internet users (though growing).

      Google has also shown that it can break into well established markets and be successful.

      Thus I am of the opinion that Google is not in a great big hurry. If I was Google I would play hardball as well. Perhaps down the road it will give you a favorable bargaining position.

      Until Chinese start buying products at a fair market value (there is a reason why software in the USA costs 250$ and in China 13$), who exactly are you advertising to, and how can you make any money off of them? I mean if it takes 100 clicks on a link to sell one copy of software at 250$ then that service is worth X. If it takes 10,000 clicks on a link to sell one copy of software at 13$ then that service is worth Y. It is a rather simple equation. Now take a tally of all the X's and all the Y's and subtract that from what it cost to actually provide that service. If you get a negative number for Y, or a number so small in comparison to X, then basically you don't really care all that much one way or another. The only exception would be for "future considerations", basically start market penetration now (which will cost little), and in 10 years or so it might pay off. Of course if your Google, you can also leverage the fact that most of the known world uses your product, and if you keep it up, hopefully in 10 years that won't change, in which case penetrating that market down the road might not be that big a deal anyway.

      It will happen, its just many years away is all, and Google need not bend over backwards simply to enter into a market of little value now in the hopes that one day it will work out.

    2. Re:Posturing? by binkzz · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's not just about the market - it's also about the risks. If they stay in China, sooner or later the Chinese government will gain full access to their servers (either by hacking or by confiscation), and with it all the information they want. Plus the search algorithms.

      --
      'For we walk by faith, not by sight.' II Corinthians 5:7
  6. It should be interesting by Jeng · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Has a major player like Google ever completely abandoned a country before?

    It should be interesting to see what kind of effect this has on Google, I doubt there will be a major change in China over this.

    --
    Don't know something? Look it up. Still don't know? Then ask.
  7. Duality in Leadership by eldavojohn · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "I think Google thought China would be flexible," said Rob Enderle, an analyst with the Enderle Group.

    My opinion is that the CEO, Eric Schmidt, differs from the young idealism of Larry Page and Sergey Brin. I do not mean that either side of this leadership is right or wrong but instead simply that they have different motivations. Brin's past has come up before as a source for this (seemingly) new found anti-censorship campaign.

    Google's leadership is conflicted. Brin & Page see the ethics of the situation most important because their motivation seems to be less devoted to money. It certainly seemed to be an exercise in indexing when they started "Google." Schmidt, however, owes his allegience to the shareholders. Or at least feels the pull and responsibility of profit more so than any sort of ethical dilemma. And that's why he was put in that position: to keep investors investing. And, honestly, this last point is why I think this 'removal' is nothing but a rumor or a bluff. Because money is one of the most important things to Google. I don't think the young idealism will stand up to stock prices ... and I think everyone involved knows it. Until you tell me that Google.cn is dead and I go to the site and confirm it, I will not believe for a second this is possible.

    Brin and Page's cashing out is really just symbolic of what's already happened at Google. Their motivations are like any other company's. Some of it is about the customer and some of it is about profit ... and that's it. Pesky ideals and ethics have no place in corporate America. Step aside. It's the safest path to churn out tons of cash. They're walking away from too much money and market to pull out of China. It would be bad for stocks and any investors would flip out ... probably even sue.

    --
    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:Duality in Leadership by Stargoat · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Could a lawsuit have merit when Google's motto is do no evil? It is clear that their presence in China was creating harm.

      On another note, I agree that google.cn will not be going anywhere. If nothing else, it would be a big FU to China to leave it as is but remove all censorship. Heck, pulling it might be construed as surrendering to censorship and therefore evil.

      --
      Hoist Number One and Number Six.
    2. Re:Duality in Leadership by introspekt.i · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Schmidt may owe his allegiance to the shareholders, but he might also be able to make the case that pulling out of China (for now) in the name of free speech will add so much value to the Google brand that it may be an opportunity not worth missing.

      Or at least feels the pull and responsibility of profit more so than any sort of ethical dilemma.

      How are you so sure?

      Pesky ideals and ethics have no place in corporate America.

      I think you're being a bit too cynical with Google. At least thus far, I think they've shown a healthy habit of finding a third way to maintain trust with consumers and build confidence in shareholders. Google isn't in an invulnerable position. If they scare their customers enough, people will simply stop using them out of fear of what's going on with their information because they don't trust Google any more. Google has to appease its user base just as much as its shareholders. This issue in China might be a case of it falling in favor of its users to protect its brand in its main markets.

    3. Re:Duality in Leadership by khallow · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Could a lawsuit have merit when Google's motto is do no evil?

      No. And it's not clear that Google's presence was doing harm.

    4. Re:Duality in Leadership by Idiomatick · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Clear?

      Interaction is a good thing. Google opens the world up to China much better than China based Baidu. From there Chinese people get access to a wider range of views and opinions. They have greater contact with europeans and americans so they can see more opinions. They can realize more effectively that people aren't out to get them. Even though censorship is bad nothing is clearly more censorship.

      The best solution would be for Google to poke holes in China's wall... repeatedly. Automated English -> Chinese translations brought to the forefront. That would increase the list of things China's firewall would have to blacklist by a fuck of a lot. How about having the Google logo say something 'interesting' about Chinese government each day? Or provide high-quality networking tools and remote networking tools that can act as a proxy. Just push the envelope repeatedly until either China cools down or they get thrown out.

      "it would be a big FU to China to leave it as is but remove all censorship."
      While that'd be fun... it'd put google at pretty big legal risk. And more importantly the CEO has a duty to not have all his chinese employees taken to a chinese prison and not heard from again for 20 years...

    5. Re:Duality in Leadership by blueskies · · Score: 2, Funny

      Your honor, it says they are supposed to no evil, but they still eat meat. Please give me all of their money.

  8. Enderle by thelexx · · Score: 5, Insightful

    > 'I think Google thought China would be flexible,' said Rob Enderle, an analyst with the Enderle Group.

    And I think you're an idiot Robert. If there is one word NO ONE in the West would use to describe the Chinese government, it is 'flexible'.

    --
    "Gold still represents the ultimate form of payment in the world." - Alan Greenspan, 1999
    1. Re:Enderle by GPLDAN · · Score: 3, Insightful

      PLEASE stop using Rob Enderle as a source for analysis. Time and time again this guy has managed to be wrong, yet people STILL go to him for quotes on anything related to technology.

  9. Don't assume all people will/have access by Shivetya · · Score: 5, Insightful

    that number is really good when used two ways.

    1) To sell people on the idea of possible market places

    2) When trying to dilute negative actions by the government on a per capita basis, like how they claim to be very environmentally friendly on a per capita basis.

    I do find it humorous all the people mentioning that Bing(MS)/Yahoo will go as they have no morals, I wonder how many read about the story in angst while using products wholly or partially made in China.

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
  10. Android will keep Google in China by perpenso · · Score: 3, Insightful

    While China isn't a huge profit machine right now for them, access to 1.3B Internet users will be a big deal down the road.

    Android will probably keep Google in the Chinese market and generate targeted advertising revenue in some manner.

  11. Trade secrets by Nimey · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Maybe former Google.cn employees will find themselves pressured into giving away Google's trade secrets to the Chinese government.

    --
    Hail Eris, full of mischief...

    E pluribus sanguinem
  12. Subsidiary by rodrigoandrade · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yeah Google may pull out of China, but there's no way in hell they'll just turn away over a BILLION customers (or advertisers' customers).

    They'll just open a subsidiary in China and operate within the law.

    There: do no evil under your own brand name.

  13. Well that is good but. by LWATCDR · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Will Google stop buying stuff from China.
    The Nexus 1 is made by HTC probably in China.
    The iPhone and most of Apples products are made in China so no Google isn't alone.
    We as a nation need to stop sending our money to China. How about it Google. Take that big monster pile of cash and build some factories in the US.
    Start making phones and motherboards in the US again. Would you pay $10 more for a Google Motherboard built in Iowa or Idaho over an Asus built in China if it was the same quality?
    Think of it Google you could pay workers in the US that would then spend that money in the US and buy stuff made in the US "hopefully"
    How about not just trying to not be evil but trying to be good?

    On a more cynical note. Google isn't making a lot of money in China, odds are the Chinese search engine is benefiting from stolen Google tech will get government support, and they could leverage that tech to start going head to head with Google in world markets.
    So they have nothing really to loose by bailing out of China.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    1. Re:Well that is good but. by iserlohn · · Score: 2, Informative

      The Nexus One is built by HTC in Taiwan. The components are sourced from around the world though (eg. screen is from Samsung/SK).

  14. Re:What is the price of tea in China? by c++0xFF · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So, 20% of the world's population doesn't affect the other 80%?

    You're right that other places have a tighter cultural connection, but you can only ignore an elephant in the room for so long. Google may only be a mouse, but that's enough to make the elephant pretty mad.

  15. What money? by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What money? People keep talking about China as if it is some huge source of profit for google. It is not. Google has a few side startups but its main business, advertising is NOT present in China. There are some chinese advetisers but they advertise OUTSIDE China.

    The amount of revenue is around 300 million dollar. A pathetic amount and that is revenue, not profit.

    The MBA's have long since declared China as some kind of holy grail, were the streets are made of gold and profits just happen. But it just ain't turning out that way.

    For europeans, the US of A was much the same. Oh if we can only launch our product over there, we will have it made. Forget, if you are big in Holland then a flea can squash you in the US. You are nothing. Do 10 miljoen euro's and you will be a tiny blip as a Humvee drives over you. Conquer the german market, go south to france. Not instantly across the ocean, with insane transportation costs, gap in working hours, cultural differences.

    Google did have long term plans for China, but they might be wondering that with the little result so far, it is actually worth the hassle.

    And I think China might be bluffing as well. If Google moves out, they might not loose all that much, but others could start to examine their own future in China.

    In itself, it is not unusual for a company to rethink its activities in a region.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:What money? by DigitalSorceress · · Score: 3, Insightful

      /THIS

      I've thought along the same lines for some time.

      Yes, China has a Billion people, but that doesn't scale the same way as a Billion US or European consumers would. There's HUGE cultural and economic gaps. This is why they're making all our cheap crap... they've got abysmal conditions for labor and can pay their workers a pittance. Sure, those conditions and that money is probably a BIG STEP UP over how many were living, but it does not equate into a billion people suddenly buying dishwashers, TVs, washers, driers, and other goods. Besides, even if it did, they're probably going to buy cheap Chinese-made crap anyway.

      I had a point in here somewhere... Oh yeah: Someone once told me that when "they" declare a gold rush, be the one selling the shovels.

      I think that there are a lot of clever people selling shovels (getting rich sending business to China or making money off businesses who think their futures are in China), and a lot of not-quite-as-clever folks mining for gold (looking to make fortunes by doing business in/with China).

      Maybe Google is starting to add up the cost of doing business there and has realized that they were on the wrong end of that equation.

      Google wins twice: 1) they stop spending money and taking (security and financial risk) on a losing proposition, and 2) they get a big public relations boost for standing on principles.

      Don't get me wrong, I've got nothing against the Chinese people... I'm just saying (as the parent post said) China is nowhere near the business-paradise that many folks seem to think it is. There are different cultural, economic, and government forces at work than in the West, and anyone who thinks they can just waltz in there is falling victim to magical thinking:

      1) Start doing business in / with China
      2) ???
      3) PROFIT!

      --

      The Digital Sorceress
  16. Re:What is the price of tea in China? by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Who cares about China. Seriously.

    I'll bite. I care about China. I care about that one sixth of the world's population developing and coming out of poverty. To a lesser extent, I care about them becoming a serious player in the world market. Right now they play with their money and disrespect their work force beyond belief. It might not make you feel bad to pick up some piece of electronics at Walmart for $20 but I do feel bad when I see "Made in China" and have to think about the health problems the workers might develop ... the environmental damage the plant might create ... the plant's drinking water problems from the lead ... the list goes on. In order to solve these problems, people have to be unafraid to speak up. People need a method for improving these conditions -- however slowly it might come. They don't have that. Removing government censorship mandates is one step toward that. Yeah it's a slow process and it might not seem like much to you but it is to me.

    These are topics much closer to home with a much greater impact on us.

    I've tried to shake the "East Versus West" mentality as much as possible, it's sad to see it lingers on in some form. All countries are members of the world. Just because one country speaks the same language you do and has the same form of government you do shouldn't make it anymore or less important to you than another country with differences. China's population might even make it more important than Australia to me. You seem to have some very strange misconceptions about allegiances to countries that are disconnected from you. They hold no domain over you whether they're Australia or China. I certainly expect more of my representatives than to say "it's written into law in Australia, it should be in our law here." This "because everyone else is doing it" does not suffice as an argument where I live. Look at the Scandinavian nations that have taken different routes on copyright. It's okay to have different laws in different countries.

    What a bunch of Google execs will do with a handful of employees in China... not so much.

    I would wager that the precedent this public display sets will have far more implications for you (and what you consume) than Australia's "Think of the Children" campaign.

    --
    My work here is dung.
  17. Re:Good news for Baidu! by jimicus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Look at this another way:

    Possible Motivation for An Organised Attempt to Hack Google:

    • Gain access to Google's user data. Not good - that data is far and away the biggest thing Google sell.
    • Gain insight into Google's technology. Even worse - their technology is what keeps their users coming back, and prevents the user data above from becoming stale.
    • Willy waving. Embarrassing for Google, particularly if it leads to either of the above being compromised.

    Sooner or later, the cost of dealing with this kind of espionage will outweigh the benefit of doing business in China. Looks like Google reckon that time has already come.

  18. Re:I think Rob though Google thought... by merc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yeah, but it's also nice to be able to recognize the shills and nutters. Whenever I read a report or analysis written by Enderle, Lyons or Didio I immediately consider the opposite of whatever they claim might be true. Whenever I hear anything written by O'Gara I assume it's outlight lies and spin.

    --
    It's true no man is an island, but if you take a bunch of dead guys and tie 'em together, they make a good raft.
  19. What's wrong with being an ethical company? by yog · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It seems that Google can't win. Either they make a deal with the devil as SputnikPanic puts it, or they behave ethically and attract savage criticism from armchair quarterbacks everywhere.

    Google has a corporate culture of idealism, no doubt fed by the youthfulness of its top executives and much of its staff. Beyond that, they have traditionally been a good corporate citizen, giving a lot of their work back to the community by open sourcing it.

    They created the Android phone operating system to be an open alternative to the various proprietary systems. Anyone can take it and run with it. A whole menagerie of excellent smart phones has emerged with Google technology at their core.

    Almost all of Google's apps--search, email, scholar, news, maps, voice, and on and on--are free to use, usually in exchange for mild ad text and aggregated use data.

    Google gets it. They do things right. They reward innovation, they encourage creativity. They are the epitome of a great American company.

    Therefore, to top off their greatness by refusing to deal with a censoring, dissident-hacking corrupt communist-only-in-name dictatorship is both admirable and gutsy and uniquely American. If only all American companies operated on principles rather than pure greed, think what a better society we would have, and a better world.

    I feel duty-bound to support Google in whatever ways I can. Right now it's my Nexus One phone, my gmail, and when I have some spare cash I'll buy a few shares of stock. Go, Google! Show those arrogant turds that at least a few Americans still believe in freedom over profit.

    --
    it's = "it is"; its = possessive. E.g., it's flapping its wings.
  20. Yep! Time to pack it up and go home! by King_TJ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Anything short of Google exiting China completely would just emphasize China's stance that they can censor anyone, any time -- and even the USA will bow to their demands, when push comes to shove.

    It's irrelevant if "Bing takes their place", really. This isn't about Bing or Microsoft right now. It's about Google and how THEY will react to being told by a nation how to run a search engine.

    If and when Microsoft opportunistically steps in and offers to do what Google refused to do, THEN it will be about Microsoft. We can cross that bridge when we come to it.

  21. Re:What is the price of tea in China? by ckaminski · · Score: 2, Interesting

    We all have to remember that China is probably the last remaining "empire" - until very recently (historically), they've been nothing but a feudal civilization, dominated by emperors from afar. It's going to take a generation or two to evolve to something like what Hong Kong enjoyed under British colonial rule.

  22. Google Scholar by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 3, Interesting

    In theory, this is why China should care about Google:

    http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2010/02/china-scientists-google/

  23. The Dictator's Dilemma by Hasai · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The problem with being a totalitarian regime is that you can never, ever, let-up on that boot you have grinding-down upon the necks of the people, even if you want to.
    Because the moment you do let-up, the people will stand up, and the next thing you know, you're hanging from a lamp post by a meat hook.

    --

    Regards;

    Hasai

  24. Enderle Group by lordshipmayhem · · Score: 3, Informative

    "Rob Enderle, an analyst with the Enderle Group"

    No, Rob Enderle is the Enderle Group.

    Based on Rob's reporting history with companies like the SCO Group, Novell, IBM and Microsoft, I've long ago concluded he inhabits his own little fictional world.

    This report is quoting quite heavily from Rob the Delusional. If he says Google is going, they're probably staying.

  25. Re:What is the price of tea in China? by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The loans are not callable.
    And the limit of our liability is whatever assets are in their countries.

    China has bought trillions to keep their currency from appreciating. When they stop buying, the currency appreciates anyway and those trillions in purchases lose significant value. So yea, they are going to lose trillions of bucks whatever they do.

    In the meant time, the US got cheap goods and they got jobs and a chance to build infrastructure.

    But you don't suppress your currency value for as long as they did and as much as they did without paying for it at some point.

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  26. Rob Enderle's wikipedia entry by gov_coder · · Score: 2, Informative

    From his wiki page:
    Education:
    - Orange Coast College -- Associate's Degree in Merchandising
    - CSU Long Beach -- BS in 'Man Power'
    - PACE U -- certificate in 'Market Analysis'

    This guy has always seemed to me to be the very essence of F_ _ _ TARD.
    If I want to listen to the mindless ravings of tards, I'll turn on fox-news.

    --
    Rob Enderle's excellent new book: Everything I needed to know about Computer Science I learned in Marketing School