Google has fired a new salvo in a censorship battle with Beijing by adding a feature that warns users in China who enter search keywords that might produce blocked results and suggests they try other terms.
Google's
announcement Thursday described the change as a technical improvement
and made no mention of Beijing's extensive Internet controls. But it
comes after filters were tightened so severely in recent weeks that
searches fail for some restaurants, universities or tourist information.
Authorities were trying to stamp out talk about an embarrassing scandal
over the fall of a rising Communist Party star.
Google Inc. closed its China-based search engine in 2010 to avoid cooperating with government censorship. Mainland users can see its Chinese-language site in Hong Kong but the connection breaks if they search for sensitive terms.
The
new feature will alert users if they enter a search term that "may
temporarily break your connection to Google," said a blog post by a
Google senior vice president, Alan Eustace. He said it will suggest they
"try other search terms."
"By
prompting people to revise their queries, we hope to reduce these
disruptions and improve our user experience from mainland China,"
Eustace wrote.
Google cited as
an example the Chinese character "jiang," or river, without mentioning
it is the name of former President Jiang Zemin, the possible reason
results are blocked. It says the site will recommend removing the
character.
Google could anger
Beijing by pointing out individual terms that might produce blocked
results. Chinese regulators do not disclose which terms are banned. They
try to hide censorship by returning the same error message as for a
technical failure, possibly to avoid drawing attention to unwanted
topics.
A Google spokesman declined to comment on whether the company was concerned about Chinese government retaliation.
Google
was allowed to keep a network of advertising sales offices in China
that might be vulnerable if the communist government tries to punish the
company.
Google, based in
Mountain View, California, had 16.6 percent of China's search market in
the first quarter based on use of its global and Hong Kong sites,
according to Analysys International, a Beijing research firm. It was in
second place behind local rival Baidu Inc., which 78.5 percent, but
ahead of other Chinese competitors.
Google
is also promoting its Android mobile phone operating system for use by
Chinese manufacturers. Beijing approved Google's $12.5 billion
acquisition of Motorola Mobility, a wireless device maker, last month on
condition Android remains available to Chinese companies and others at
no cost for five years.
Tensions
over censorship highlight Beijing's complicated relations with global
technology companies. The communist government wants to boost incomes by
promoting high-tech industry but insists on controlling access to
information.
Beijing promotes
Internet use for education and business and has the world's biggest
population of Internet users, with 513 million people online as of
December, but tries to block politically sensitive material.
The
latest tightening of controls was prompted by a flurry of rumors online
about the downfall of Bo Xilai, a prominent politician who was party
secretary of the major city of Chongqing in the southwest.
In
addition to Bo's name, blocked terms include Chongqing and Yangtze
River, which flows past the city. That means searches for universities,
hotels, restaurants or other businesses that use those names also fail.
China's
two most popular microblog services stopped allowing new postings for
three days in early April to erase what they said were illegal or
harmful postings.
Google's
engineers reviewed the 350,000 most popular search queries in China in
an effort to find "disruptive queries," the company said.
Google
gave no indication when development of the latest feature started but
said it received reports of unreliable searches "over the past couple of
years."(Yahoo)
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