By
Elinor Mills
Wednesday, January 25 2006 03:44 PM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/internet/0,39044908,39307517,00.htm
Google said Tuesday it would launch versions of its search and news Web
sites in China that censor material deemed objectionable to authorities there,
reasoning that users getting limited access to content was better than none.
The new local Google site, expected to be launched on Wednesday at Google.cn, will include notes at the bottom of results pages
that disclose when content has been removed, said Andrew McLaughlin, senior
policy counsel for Google.
"Google.cn will comply with local Chinese
laws and regulations," he said in a statement. "In deciding how best to approach
the Chinese--or any--market, we must balance our commitments to satisfy the
interest of users, expand access to information, and respond to local conditions."
Google will not initially offer Gmail or Blogger in China until executives
feel they can strike that balance adequately, McLaughlin said.
Web surfers in China have had difficulty accessing the Google service,
reporting frustratingly slow connections and time-outs, Google said. Human
rights groups have accused China's government of blocking access to Web sites
that do not adhere to the government's restrictions.
The France-based human rights group Reporters Without Borders
blasted Google, saying it was taking an immoral position that could not be justified.
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"By offering a version without 'subversive' content, Google is making it
easier for Chinese officials to filter the Internet themselves. A Web site not
listed by search engines has little chance of being found by users," the group
said in a statement. "The new Google version means that even if a human rights
publication is not blocked by local firewalls, it has no chance of being read in China."
With a population of 1.3 billion people and more than 100 million Internet
users, China's largely untapped Internet market is very attractive to technology
companies. Google is opening a research and development center in China and owns
a stake in Baidu.com, the most popular search engine in that country.
Google is not the only U.S. search firm targeted with complaints about
censorship in China. Previously, Google censored its news site in China,
removing material banned by the authorities, but it had not censored its
U.S.-based search engine accessible in China, and was the last of the major
search engines not to have done so, according to Reporters Without Borders.
Meanwhile, earlier this month Microsoft
admitted removing the blog of an outspoken Chinese journalist from its MSN
Spaces site, citing its policy of adhering to local laws. Last June, Microsoft
acknowledged censoring words like "freedom" and "democracy" from its Chinese MSN portal site.
And in September, Reporters
Without Borders accused Yahoo of providing information that helped Chinese
officials convict a journalist charged with leaking state secrets. Shi Tao was sentenced to 10 years in prison.
Angered by such reports, some politicians have threatened to pass laws restricting U.S. companies from
cooperating with the Chinese government on censorship. Hearings are planned for
the U.S. House of Representatives Subcommittee on Human Rights and in the
Congressional Human Rights Caucus.
Ironically, Google
was praised by privacy advocates and consumers last week for fighting the U.S.
government's request to hand over random Web search data. Yahoo, MSN and AOL
had complied with the request.