Google has decided to call off its efforts to redirect all China users to its Hong Kong search site, sort of. Instead of automatically sending searchers straight on to google.com.hk, the search giant ...
eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More. Citing threats from China’s government that would make its ...
Google announced they are no longer allowed under Chinese law to redirect Google.cn to Google.com.hk. The Chinese government told Google that they won’t renew their license to operate in China if they ...
Google has made its decision on China: it's moving search to Hong Kong. Google has shut down its Google.cn site and is redirecting users to Google.com.hk, where it will offer uncensored ...
Google has shut down it’s Chinese search site at Google.cn and is now redirecting visitors to Google.com.hk. This is in response to the widely reported cyber attack on Google in December, Google ...
Google has officially stopped censoring search results in China, but in a somewhat roundabout way. Google.cn no longer works as a search portal—instead, visitors are being directed to Google's service ...
Google said Monday that it has stopped censoring its search services - Search, News and Images - on Google.cn, its site in China, and that users are now being redirected to Google.com.hk, its Hong ...
It's not quite the ceasing of operations that the local papers were reporting last week, but Google has announced today what it's calling an "entirely legal" way of giving mainland China unfiltered ...
eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More. Google blamed blockages of searches on its Google.hk ...
Google Inc. announced Monday that it would stop censoring its search engines in China, and began redirecting Chinese visitors to its servers in Hong Kong. In its official blog, Google said the company ...
SAN FRANCISCO — Google plans to stop automatically sending users in mainland China to its uncensored Hong Kong site, in an effort to appease Beijing as it seeks to renew its license to operate in ...
Google will keep some employees in China but will shut down its Google.cn site and offer uncensored Chinese-language search from Hong Kong in resolving its dispute with the Chinese government. Tom ...