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谷歌考虑退出:关闭中国运营及网站

 
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发表于 2010-1-13 12:53:25 | 只看该作者 回帖奖励 |倒序浏览 |阅读模式

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北京时间1月13日早间消息,谷歌在其官方博客上宣布,公司不愿再对其中国版搜索引擎Google.cn的搜索结果进行审查,并承认这项决定可能意味着Google.cn将不得不关闭,可能连谷歌驻中国的办事处也会关闭。 中国异议人 ... [ 查看全文 ]

§ 发表于 2010-1-13
吓死他,也不会退出中国!
很快会有更优秀的中国网站出现!!!
沙发
发表于 2010-1-13 13:31:25 | 只看该作者
百度就可替代谷歌了
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板凳
发表于 2010-1-13 13:46:59 | 只看该作者

谷歌考虑退出:关闭中国运营及网站

本帖最后由 cgigate 于 2010-1-13 14:29 编辑

中国应该把这家公司赶出去!
Google本身在中国就很失败,现在找个借口
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地板
发表于 2010-1-13 15:37:52 | 只看该作者
支持Google。民不应因言获罪,这是中国宪法规定的。现在ZF是违宪,还进行黑客活动,还有没有天理,这和土匪有啥区别。
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5#
发表于 2010-1-13 15:38:24 | 只看该作者
中国应该把这家公司赶出去!
Google本身在中国就很失败,现在找个借口
cgigate 发表于 2010-1-13 13:46 http://bbs.51.ca/images/common/back.gif



yeah, to "secure" our network community, right?
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6#
发表于 2010-1-13 16:34:40 | 只看该作者
Google有必要这么大惊小怪么?记不记得911后,Google Map 上政府部门都给模糊了。谁的要求?Email被黑了,说明技术不完善。
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7#
发表于 2010-1-13 16:52:24 | 只看该作者
中国不能搞 “因言获罪”。
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8#
发表于 2010-1-13 17:16:59 | 只看该作者
说白了就是试图不遵守中国的法令,在大是大非面前,一个谷歌关不关门算个屁。在我看来,有本事直接关门,何必来个不痛不痒的声明,中国政府不会看,网民也不会看。你去你的google.com好了,别以为中国的互联网管理部门不会禁。
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9#
发表于 2010-1-13 18:52:58 | 只看该作者
真佩服 Google 为言论自由敢跟任何强权作斗争。
前几年 Google 也拒绝提供网民搜索关键词给美国施法部。
Google, 好样的!
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10#
发表于 2010-1-13 19:49:53 | 只看该作者
要学会平衡“原则”和“钱途”!
既要做得表面上大义凛然的不为所动地坚持原则,又要不动声色暗通款曲把钱赚到手,而且还要把竞争对手倒打一把!
要做到中国的这个谚语境界:既当婊子,又要立贞节牌坊!
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11#
发表于 2010-1-13 22:33:36 | 只看该作者

谷歌考虑退出:关闭中国运营及网站

本帖最后由 hongyuincanada 于 2010-1-13 22:37 编辑

建议大家读读加拿大本地人对下面这条新闻的评论,代表了普通加拿大人对中国的印象:[url=http://www.cbc.ca/money/story/2010/01/13/tech-google-china.htmlhttp://www.cbc.ca/money/story/2010/01/13/tech-google-china.html[/url]http://www.cbc.ca/money/story/2010/01/13/tech-google-china.htmlhttp://www.cbc.ca/money/story/2010/01/13/tech-google-china.html[/url[/url]]

Google threat a rare show of defiance in China
Last Updated: Wednesday, January 13, 2010 | 4:56 PM ET Comments194Recommend158The Associated Press
Google's threat to pull out of China over censorship is a rare display of defiance in a system where foreign companies have long accepted intrusive controls to gain access to a huge and growing market.

A Chinese Google user lays flowers outside Google China headquarters in Beijing on Wednesday. (Vincent Thian/Associated Press) Dismayed by the prospect of a China without Google, visitors left flowers at its Beijing headquarters Wednesday as websites buzzed with words of support and appeals to stay.

"I felt it's a pity and hope it will not withdraw from the Chinese market," said a man who left flowers at the building in the high-tech Haidian district and would give only his surname, Chang.

"Google played a key role in the growth of our generation. The control (of the internet) is excessive."

In industries from automaking to fast food, companies have been forced to allow communist authorities to influence — and sometimes dictate — their choice of local partners, where to operate and what products to sell.

Web companies have endured criticism for co-operating with a communist system that tightly controls information. Google Inc., Yahoo Inc., Microsoft Corp. and others have acceded to pressure to block access to politically sensitive material.

Media face challenges
"The internet is like media, and the media are under tight government control, so that poses additional challenges for foreign internet companies compared with, say, manufacturers of TV sets, mobile phones or autos," said Edward Yu, president of Analysys International, an internet research firm in Beijing.

Google's decision even to talk publicly was rare in a system where Chinese officials react angrily to criticism. Officials have wide regulatory discretion and companies avoid saying anything that might prompt retaliation.

China's Foreign Ministry and the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology did not respond to requests for comment, but the state Xinhua News Agency cited an unidentified official as saying the government was seeking more information from Google.

Phone calls to Google spokespeople in Beijing and Hong Kong were not answered.

Comments left on Chinese Internet bulletin boards praised Google's stance and appealed to the Mountainview, Calif.-based search giant not to leave.

"Google is a great soldier of freedom. You don't bend to the devils," said a note on the site Tianya.cn.

A posting on www.mop.com pleaded, "Google please don't go. We can't let you go. Real man, we support you."

Support emerges
A photo on a Chinese website showed a visitor outside the Google building bowing in a traditional gesture of respect.

China has the world's most populous internet market, with 338 million people online as of June and foreign internet companies eager for a share of that.

But despite risking damage to their reputations by co-operating with the government, they have struggled to make headway against intense competition from Chinese rivals. Yahoo, eBay Inc. and others have given up and turned over control of their China operations to local partners.

Google is the last global internet company to manage its own China arm.

Google trails local competitor Baidu Inc. but has gained market share at the expense of smaller competitors. Google had 31.8 per cent of search revenues in 2009, versus 60.9 per cent for Baidu, according to Analysys.

Google created its China-based Google.cn site in 2006, agreeing to censor results by excluding sites to which access was blocked by government filters, popularly known as the Great Firewall of China.

Despite that co-operation, Beijing accused Google last year of spreading pornography and access to the site was temporarily blocked. The company's video site, YouTube.com, is unavailable to users in China.

Google said Tuesday it would stop censoring search results on Google.cn. That would allow users to find politically sensitive photos and websites abroad, though downloading them might still be barred by government filters.

It also said it had discovered that computer hackers had tricked human-rights activists into exposing their email accounts to outsiders.

On Wednesday, Google.cn said its top search term of the day was "Tiananmen," possibly due to web surfers looking for material on the government's violent crackdown on 1989 pro-democracy protests. The No. 2 search topic was "Google leaving China."

Google.cn appeared to be still censoring results. A search for the banned Falun Gong spiritual movement returned a message saying the browser could not open the page. A notice on the site says some results were deleted in line with regulations.

Google managers told employees to go home and they did not know whether to come back Thursday, said an employee who spoke on condition of anonymity because she was not authorized to talk to reporters.
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12#
发表于 2010-1-14 00:13:32 | 只看该作者
在加拿大可以随意地上google, youtube, wikipedia, 51.ca ....相比起某大国的国民,那简直是高人一等
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