男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影

Opinion

Questions follow Google exit

By Ye Tieqiao and Lai Yang (China Daily)
Updated: 2010-04-05 15:54
Large Medium Small

Internet search giant's Chinese partner has remained silent during and after the dispute with the government. Why?

It's been months since the intense dispute between Google and Chinese government came to an end, with the Internet search giant redirecting its traffic from Beijing to Hong Kong, still there are many questions left unanswered, namely has Google really left and why was its partner in China so silent during the quarrel?

It's been widely publicized that a Jan 12 statement by David Drummond, Google senior vice president and chief legal official, started it all. In the statement, he claimed that the Internet giant, based in the Silicon Valley in California, had been heavily attacked by hackers on the mainland and was weighing whether to jump ship from Beijing.

Questions follow Google exit

The incident escalated after Drummond published another statement on March 23, saying the company would no longer filter search results on Google.cn and would redirect traffic to Google.com.hk.

During the war of words between the government and Google, the co-investor of Google.cn - an unnamed Beijing information technology company - was completely mute as the controversy unfolded. Google.cn, as a foreign Internet company trying to capture the market share from its competitor Baidu.com, has every right to decide whether to remain on the mainland. But it's unusual for its Chinese partner to be largely unheard from. Was the Chinese partner completely supportive of its foreign partner's decisions during the situation? Or is it Google's puppet?

After it was officially launched in January 2006, Google.cn was enmeshed in one of its first disputes with China. According to Chinese laws and rules, all foreign websites must obtain the Internet Content Provider (ICP) license from the government before conducting business in China. Only with this ICP license can commercial websites engage in advertising and provide paid information services, e-commerce and other application services.

Google.cn, however, had no such license when it began operations on the mainland. It was sharing the same license as Ganji.com, run by the unnamed Beijing information technology company. After the media exposed its unlicensed operations, the government suspected that Google.cn lacked legal access to the Chinese market.

Here is where the Beijing IT company comes into play. To acquire its own ICP license and legitimize its operations in China, Google established a joint venture company - Beijing Guxiang Information Technology Co Ltd - with the IT firm that runs Ganji.com. The move brought Google in line with China's Internet regulations, which states that all foreign companies can only acquire a license by partnering up with a Chinese company.

Related readings:
Questions follow Google exit Google, Rio Tinto cases not damage investment env't
Questions follow Google exit Google's exit is not exactly a windfall for Baidu
Questions follow Google exit Sina 'revaluing' its contract with Google
Questions follow Google exit Google, a mischievous boy

By setting up Beijing Guxiang Information Technology Co Ltd, Google.cn managed to secure a legal license. But according to Internet observers Wang Junxiu and Liu Xingliang, the establishment of the shell company allowed Google to expedite legal access into the Chinese Internet market. It's also been reported that Yang Haoyong, the legal representative and general manager of Beijing Guxiang Information Technology Co Ltd, has inseparable links with Google.cn. The Yale University-educated employee once worked in the Silicon Valley after graduating in 2001 and returned to China in December 2004 to jumpstart Ganji.com.

In an online program on June 13, 2007, Yang admitted the intimate ties with Google. "I have remained in contact with the world's Internet search giant since the end of 2005 and a kind of strategic cooperation was set up in 2006. Now our cooperation has become increasingly expanded," he said. "We now depend on Google for its help and support."

Yang ceased to be Beijing Guxiang company's board chairman and legal representative in its personnel reshuffling. All of the company's senior staff members reportedly have close connections with Google.cn. The pro-Google stance of the Beijing Guxiang company and its senior employees could best explain the unanimous silence among the Chinese partner in its dispute with the Chinese government.

According to Internet observer Liu Xingliang, Google's exit does not mean that the search giant has completely left the mainland, which boasts the world's largest population of Internet users. Besides redirecting its mainland users to Google.com.hk, the company has not made any substantial steps toward saying goodbye to the mainland. Its mainland-based servers have not been moved out and the five companies that Google.cn invests in are still planning to stay on the mainland without any intention of leaving.

The authors are China Youth Daily journalists.

 

主站蜘蛛池模板: 牙克石市| 肇东市| 徐汇区| 腾冲县| 万州区| 敖汉旗| 霍城县| 石屏县| 眉山市| 横峰县| 驻马店市| 祥云县| 依安县| 利辛县| 长沙市| 南充市| 札达县| 开平市| 土默特左旗| 乐业县| 荣成市| 嫩江县| 大渡口区| 鱼台县| 大连市| 绵竹市| 台安县| 巩义市| 长顺县| 康乐县| 柘城县| 黄陵县| 阿克| 保定市| 渑池县| 辽阳县| 宁乡县| 周口市| 章丘市| 宁陕县| 成武县| 宜君县| 龙山县| 乌拉特后旗| 商河县| 柳江县| 五莲县| 内江市| 诏安县| 边坝县| 靖江市| 巫山县| 洞口县| 昌平区| 维西| 永胜县| 威宁| 德保县| 青神县| 扎鲁特旗| 五家渠市| 石棉县| 永嘉县| 山阳县| 宝山区| 三台县| 合水县| 蒙阴县| 常宁市| 化州市| 兴业县| 枣阳市| 芦山县| 永泰县| 温州市| 临漳县| 吴桥县| 赫章县| 长岛县| 青田县| 汉源县| 孟津县|