Google’s partial retreat from China is condemned by government while users worry about access
By Alexa Olesen, APTuesday, March 23, 2010
Google’s action angers China, divides Web users
BEIJING — Google Inc.’s partial withdrawal from China brought condemnation and signs of pressure from the government Tuesday while leaving Chinese Web surfers to wonder whether the company’s new offshore search engine site would be blocked by censors.
Google’s decision to move most of its China-based search functions from the mainland to Hong Kong opened a new phase in a two-month-long fracas pitting the world’s most powerful Internet company against a government that tightly restricts the Web in the planet’s most populous market.
A few Chinese passers-by laid flowers or chocolates on the large metal “Google” sign outside the company’s office building in northern Beijing.
Inside, executives briefed nervous employees about what lines of the company’s business would continue. At least one client who stopped in and was anxious about his Google advertising account found staff members confused.
“Nobody in there could give me a clear answer,” said Pan Yun, manager of a Beijing real estate Web site. “I just want to know if our business can continue but they couldn’t give me an answer.”
Meanwhile, TOM Online, a provider of online and mobile services in China that is controlled by Hong Kong’s richest man, said it was dropping its affiliation with Google for fear of running afoul of mainland censorship rules. The company said it would stop using Google’s search services at the expiry of their current agreement, though did not provide a time frame.
The moves underscored the uncertainties Google faces after announcing Monday that its China search engine, google.cn, would automatically redirect queries to its service in China’s semiautonomous territory of Hong Kong, where Google is not legally required to censor searches.
While the search engine was the most politically charged part of its business, Google still plans to roll out mobile phones based on its Android platform with Chinese phone companies. It’s also keeping a research and sales division in China. Its map services and a free, advertiser-supported music portal still have their servers in the mainland, and its Gmail e-mail service remains available too.
“It’s a balancing act. They are trying to leave but not leave, stay but not stay,” said Duncan Clark, managing director of BDA China Ltd., a technology market research firm.
Many Chinese felt caught in the middle, admiring Google for taking a stand against censorship but wondering whether the government might further punish the company.
“I don’t know what the Chinese government will do to Google next,” said Zhou Shuguang, a well-known blogger who uses the online name “Zuola.” ”But I welcome the move and support Google because an uncensored search engine is something that I need.”
Google first said it was considering a shutdown in January over cyberattacks and stringent censorship requirements. With the new Hong Kong-based search engine, users from China would hardly have unfettered access. Searches from China must pass through the Chinese government’s extensive Web filters — collectively known as the Great Firewall — which automatically weeds out anything considered pornographic or politically sensitive. The move, in effect, shifts the responsibility for censoring from Google to the communist government.
Beijing responded swiftly, testily declaring that Google violated commitments it made to abide by China’s censorship rules when it entered the China market in 2006.
“This is totally wrong. We’re uncompromisingly opposed to the politicization of commercial issues, and express our discontent and indignation to Google for its unreasonable accusations and conducts,” an official with the Internet bureau of the State Council Information Office, China’s Cabinet, was quoted as saying by the official Xinhua News Agency.
The withdrawal of its search engine makes Google the latest foreign Internet company to founder in a China market that is heavily regulated and prone to particular consumer tastes. Companies such as Yahoo, eBay and Microsoft’s MSN instant messaging service have never gained as much traction in the China market as their homegrown rivals. Google ran a distant No. 2 with 35 percent of the search market, compared with local rival Baidu Inc.’s 60 percent.
Google’s discord with the Chinese government added to souring ties between Washington and Beijing over Taiwan, Tibet and trade and others economic issues.
Playing down the friction with the Internet company and with Washington, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said China had a right to filter content deemed harmful to society and national security and Google’s response should not harm wider relations with the United States.
“The Google incident is just an individual action taken by a business company, and I can’t see its impact on China-U.S. relations unless someone wants to politicize that,” Qin said at a routine media briefing.
Google’s strategy leaves the google.com.hk search engine vulnerable to a total blockade. Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, which is owned by Google, are completely shut out of the mainland. The Mountain View, California, company also could see its existing operations foiled by a government unhappy about being challenged by a marquee foreign investor.
Despite reports saying a move was imminent, Google’s decision caught many Chinese users by surprise. He Xinliang, an employee at an Internet security company in China’s western city of Xi’an, first realized something had changed when he clicked on google.cn but found himself on the Hong Kong site.
“I was more or less mentally prepared for this because it’s been a hot topic for a while, but I was still just a little surprised,” said He, who regularly uses Gmail, Google Docs and Google Calendar. “At least the page is still in simplified Chinese.”
The Hong Kong page offers search results in the simplified Chinese characters used in mainland China in addition to the traditional characters used in the self-governed territory.
Initial post-move plans were broken to some of Google’s 600 Chinese staff at a meeting held in the first-floor cafeteria of Google’s Beijing office, said company spokeswoman Jessica Powell.
“We haven’t worked out all the details so we can’t ever rule out letting people go, but we very much want to avoid that,” said Powell.
On taobao.com, a popular Chinese online retailer, one vendor already was selling a “GoogleBye” t-shirt for 38 yuan ($5.50). The words were tucked under an image of the Great Wall and above that in Chinese characters, it said “Long Live the People’s Republic of China.”
The State Council official said the government talked to Google twice to try to resolve the standoff and suggested that China’s laws requiring Web sites to censor themselves was nonnegotiable.
“We made patient and meticulous explanations on the questions Google raised … telling it we would still welcome its operation and development in China if it was willing to abide by Chinese laws, while it would be its own affair if it was determined to withdraw its service,” the official said.
Still, the decision is likely to further dismay many Internet-literate Chinese, who admired Google’s fight against censorship even though they don’t like to be reminded of the government’s heavy hand.
“I feel that people will greatly respect Google’s action,” said Beijing law professor and human rights lawyer Teng Biao. “China’s censorship of the Internet search engine results is a violation of the most basic of human rights. By doing this, Google will bring more global attention to China’s human rights situation.”
Associated Press writers Gillian Wong and Anita Chang and researcher Xi Yue in Beijing contributed to this report.
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