Monday, March 21, 2011

Searching For Answers In Google Versus China

Google and China are at it again.

Google has accused the Chinese government of disrupting Gmail in the country, making it difficult in the last few weeks for users here to gain access to the company’s popular e-mail service.


Google said that it was not having any technical problems with Google’s main Web site or Gmail service in China.

“There is no issue on our side; we have checked extensively,” Google said in a statement released Sunday. “This is a government blockage, carefully designed to look like the problem is with Gmail.”

Analysts who track Web developments say that the Chinese government may be intentionally disrupting access to Google and other Web services as part of a campaign to tighten Internet controls and censor material.

Calls to China’s Foreign Ministry were not returned Sunday. Beijing has long had some of the world’s strictest Internet controls. But after pro-democracy demonstrations broke out in the Middle East in January, the Chinese government seems to have intensified effort to censor Web content and disrupt Web searches related to calls for similar protests in China. 

There's a surprise, China has decided that the lesson from its last tangle with Google is not to stop cracking down on internet freedom, it's to make it look like technical problems instead and to blame Google.  Pretty clever, but it only works once.

Still, this seems to suggest China is very concerned about the wave of unrest in the Middle East and North Africa and will do everything it can to stop an uprising in China before it can be allowed to start, including rolling over Google's searches.

Of course, if Google hasn't figured this out by now that their presence in China is completely expendable, it's their own fault.

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