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Chinese government happy with Google's redirect

China is satisfied that Google is complying with Chinese laws after it tweaked the way it directs users to an unfiltered search page.

The comments from a Ministry of Industry and Information Technology official largely echoed previous Chinese statements, but are likely to be seen as good news for the company as Beijing has been coy about its long-term future in China.

Google is trying to achieve a delicate balance of ending self-censorship of searches, while holding onto its business foothold in a country where control of information has been key to ensuring the Communist Party's decades in power.

Google's market share in China continued to slip in the second quarter, falling to 27.3% from 29.5% in the first, according to data from iResearch.

Before its high-profile spat with Beijing, Google was slowly gaining ground on China's top search engine Baidu. At the end of last year, Google's market share was 32.8%.

Guxiang, a company that operates Google's websites in China, had committed to "abide by Chinese law," and ensure the company did not provide illegal content, said Zhang Feng, head of the ministry's communication development division.

"After examination, we have concluded that it has basically met the requirements according to the relevant laws and regulations," Zhang told a news conference.

Closed site

Google unexpectedly warned in January it might quit China over censorship concerns and after suffering a hacker attack it said came from within the country, but eventually terminated its Google.cn search service and started rerouting users to its unfiltered Hong Kong site.

In early July the company ended automatic redirection, saying Beijing was unhappy about the system and would not renew Google's operating licence if it continued.

Visitors are now invited to click through to the Hong Kong page instead of being sent straight there. China's firewall remains in place however, meaning most sensitive sites turned up on searches are inaccessible from within the country's borders.

Google's move was seen as a sign that the firm would fight to hold onto as much of its China business as possible, and Beijing said earlier this month it had renewed its Chinese operating license after the company "made improvements."

Guxiang accepted that Government regulators will have the right to supervise content provided by the firm, Zhang said, declining to comment directly on Google's provision of the link to its uncensored Hong Kong page.

"As for the question of Hong Kong, this is an operational act made by the company itself," he added, without elaborating.

China's decision to allow Google to continue operating in China apparently resolved a months-long censorship dispute that had threatened the US company's future in the world's largest internet market by users.

The move also removed another thorn in US-China relations and reflects Beijing's desire to be seen as friendly to major foreign firms in spite of ideological differences, analysts said.

Author: Reuters

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