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Users in Hong Kong will continue to receive their existing uncensored, traditional Chinese service, also from Google.com.hk. Due to the increased load on our Hong Kong servers and the complicated ...
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 ...
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.
Google's decision to move most of its China-based search functions to Hong Kong opened a new phase in a two-month-long fracas pitting the world's most powerful Internet company against a ...
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 is now redirecting those who visit the search engine to its Hong Kong site Google.com.hk, where it is serving users uncensored search in simplified Chinese.
TNW reports that Dr John Liu, Google’s head of business in China since 2006, is leaving the company. Liu — who earned his doctorate from Tekniske University in Denmark — will leave in August ...
Google Inc.’s Chinese name, a symbol of its presence in China since 2006, has been dropped from its Hong Kong web site, less than a week after the U.S. company blamed China’s government ...
After days of speculation about whether Google would pull out of China altogether rather than censor its search results, the search giant decided instead to, well, innovate. Updated with responses ...
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.
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