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Censorship by Google

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Google Censorship refers to the purposeful practice adopted by the Google search engine to suppress lists of web sites from its search results based on its political views and the lobbying effort of pressure groups.

Google has also been accused of manipulating search results to favor its own coporate ambitions and interests. Some critics have suggested that Google may be involved in yet more undected censorship of search results that have not yet surfaced.

Censorship of search results critical of the Chinese government

File:Google-censorship.jpg
Comparing Image Search results of, "Tiananmen" on Google France and Google China (February 15, 2006)
File:Google-censorship-slips.jpg
Two "sensitive" images slip through the net on Page 5 of the Image Search results of, "Tiananmen" on Google China (February 15, 2006).

Some controversy has occurred over Google's decision to adhere to the Internet censorship policy in mainland China, colloquially known as, "The Great Firewall of China". Google.cn search results are filtered so as not to bring up any results concerning the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, sites supporting the independence movements of Tibet and Taiwan or the Falun Gong movement, and other information perceived to be harmful to the People's Republic of China. This is interpreted by some activists as against the, "Don't Be Evil," corporate philosophy of Google.

The People's Republic of China (PRC), whose human rights record has been widely criticized by the international community, has in the past restricted citizen access to popular search engines such as Altavista, Yahoo!, and Google. The mirror search site elgooG has been used by users in mainland China to get around blocked content. This complete ban has since been lifted. However, the government remains active in filtering Internet content. In October 2005, Blogger and access to the Google Cache were made available in mainland China; however, in December 2005, some mainland Chinese users of Blogger reported that their access to the site was once again restricted.

In January 2006, Google affirmed its intent to filter certain keywords given to it by the government of the PRC. The restrictions will apply to thousands of terms and websites. The censored content will appear on a website called google.cn. Google was heavily criticized for the move, yet it claims it is necessary to keep the PRC government from blocking Google entirely. The company does not plan to give the government information about the users who search for blocked content, and will inform users of restricted categories. Google states on its help pages that it does not censor content, but it does block pages as demanded for in certain jurisdictions, such as DMCA requests in the United States.

Most Chinese Internet users did not express much concern about Google's choice, with one blogger saying that censorship is a fact of life in China and Google could not have done any better. Also, Google offers to Chinese internet users a choice that protects their privacy better than existing search engines available in China, since Google keeps confidential records of its users outside China, unlike domestic search engines that could be compelled by the government to hand over information at any time. The following message appears at the bottom of the Google search result page whenever results are blocked: "In accordance with local laws and policies, some of the results have not been displayed." Currently, Google is the only major China-based search engine to explicitly inform the user when search results are blocked or hidden.

On February 5, 2006, google.com was banned by China Telecom in an attempt to force googlers toward the google.cn domain, however the ban was lifted shortly thereafter.

On February 14, 2006, some users on the internet participated in a, "mass breakup with google" whereby users agreed to boycott Google on Valentine's day to show their disapproval of the Google Chinese policy.

A simple test can be performed to quantify the number of pages which google.cn censors as compared to those listed in google.com. Search using this string to compare the approximate dot-com index differential: site:.com Other top level domains can be compared similarly (.org, .cn, etc.). Searches for essential html tags, such as <html> returns the difference for all domains.

Censorship of search results critical of Radical Islam

In early 2006 Google removed search results related to the news site New Media Journal from its News search engine because Muslims complained about some anti-Islam articles.

Examples of sites censored by google:

Examples of pages censored by google:

Censorship of search results critical of Scientology

In 2002 Google was found to have censored websites that provided critical information about Scientology. ,

Further reading

See Also

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  1. Liedtke, Michael. "Google Agrees to Censor Results in China." Breitbart.com. January 24, 2006.
  2. "Google move 'black day' for China." BBC News. January 25, 2006.
  3. "Chinese bloggers debate Google." BBC News. January 26, 2006.
  4. DivineOmega. "Google gives in to China." personal blog entry. January 27, 2006.
  5. Gunther, Marc. Tech execs get grilled over China business: Yahoo, Google, Microsoft and Cisco, facing attack in Congress, say they're doing more good than harm in China." CNN. February 16, 2006.
  6. Fung, Amanda. "Midtown protest targets Google's China site." New York Business. February 14, 2006.
  7. NO LUV 4 Google Website.
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