Lettres édifiantes et curieuses. Du Halde: Description, tome second - Chine ancienne. Google lève la censure en Chine et passera par Hong Kong : Actua. Google-China move hurts businesses, academics. Google shutting China search engine Chinese businesses and universities could be affected by Google departureAcademics, students and researchers rely heavily on Google's search services Most of China's 400 million Internet users, however, wouldn't be affected Beijing, China (CNN) -- Businesses and universities could be substantially affected by the departure of Google from China.
Most of the country's nearly 400 million Internet users may not be affected by the closure. But academics, university students and other researchers rely heavily on Google's search services to access information not available through Chinese search engines, like Baidu.com, China's most popular search portal. Small businesses that depend on Google applications such as Google Docs and Gmail may also suffer, analysts said. Google quits censoring search in China China state media: Google decision 'totally wrong' Video: China business world on edge Video: Waiting Beijing's next steps So far, the site has not been blocked.
La presse officielle chinoise ne regrettera pas Google : Actuali. Le retrait de Google de Chine n'a pas d'impact sur les requêtes. Les nettoyens chinois demandent des compte sur la censure - Quan. Oui à la censure de l'Internet comme "gouvernance" raisonnable et conforme aux lois chinoises, non à la dictature, réclament en substance les auteurs d'une lettre ouverte à Google et aux ministères chinois concernés en date du 3 mars 2010. Rebecca Mac Kinnon, sur son blog RConversation, en a traduit une partie du contenu. Les questions de ces nettoyens (wangmin 网民, comme sur le schéma ci dessus) sont d'autant plus pertinentes qu'elles mettent en question une censure aux contours juridiques extrêmement flous : les circulaires émanent du département de la propagande du parti et sont secrètes (elles n'ont pas le statut de règles administratives). Leur application contrevient le plus souvent à la Constitution chinoise qui garantit le droit d'expression.
Sans compter les effets pervers d'auto-censure qui en découlent (voir cet article de la BBC). Cette entrée a été publiée dans Non classé. Google Shuts Down the Chinese Search Engine. As promised, Google will no longer censor search results in China. Google's solution is to redirect users to Google Hong Kong, which shows uncensored results. Google Blog explains this interesting decision: "Users visiting Google.cn are now being redirected to Google.com.hk, where we are offering uncensored search in simplified Chinese, specifically designed for users in mainland China and delivered via our servers in Hong Kong. (...) We want as many people in the world as possible to have access to our services, including users in mainland China, yet the Chinese government has been crystal clear throughout our discussions that self-censorship is a non-negotiable legal requirement. We believe this new approach of providing uncensored search in simplified Chinese from Google.com.hk is a sensible solution to the challenges we've faced—it's entirely legal and will meaningfully increase access to information for people in China.
" Google China's homepage until today: