China accuses Google of spreading pornography following outage in Chinese access

By Tini Tran, AP
Thursday, June 25, 2009

China accuses Google of spreading pornography

BEIJING — China’s government accused Google Inc. on Thursday of spreading pornography after Chinese Internet users were temporarily unable to gain access to the U.S. search giant’s main Web site or China-based service.

“We have found that the English version of google.com has spread lots of pornographic, lewd and vulgar content, which is in serious violation of Chinese laws and regulations,” said foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang. He said authorities “summoned representatives of Google.com in China and urged them to remove the content immediately.”

Qin, speaking at a regular briefing, did not respond to questions about whether China’s government was blocking Web users from seeing Google’s site. However, he said he hoped the problem can be “resolved immediately.”

Google said Thursday it was investigating the reason for the outage, which began late Wednesday. Chinese users were blocked from seeing Google’s U.S. site, its China-based site google.cn and its Gmail e-mail service.

A Chinese watchdog agency accused Google last week of providing links to vulgar and obscene sites. Google, based in Mountainview, Calif., said it would do more to stop users in China from accessing pornography.

“I would like to stress that Google.com, as an Internet enterprise providing services in China, should earnestly abide by all Chinese laws,” Qin said. “All the punitive measures adopted by the relevant authorities are conducted strictly according to law.”

The Chinese agency that oversees the Internet, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

China has the world’s largest population of Internet users at more than 298 million. The communist government has the world’s most extensive Web monitoring and filtering system, and it regularly blocks access to foreign Web sites.

Authorities launched a crackdown this year that led to the closing of more than 1,900 porn-related Web sites.

Google has struggled to expand in China, where it says it has about 30 percent of the search market. The company launched Google.cn with a Chinese partner after seeing its market share erode as government filters slowed access to its U.S. service.

Discussion
May 2, 2010: 4:34 pm

Pornography is a constitutionally protected right! Pornography will never be slowed by church groups or laws. The spread of pornography will only be eliminated by pornographers like me claiming the moral rights of attribution left out of US “copyreight” or Title 17. No search for any name should result in attributing art to that person that would not be allowed on other broadcast mediums by the FCC. I have sued Google Inc for attributing my name and me producing my exquisite pornography and displaying it to my own children. I have asked to add every other search engine besides Lycos.com and the United States and the FCC for malfeasance regulating communications by wire.

“Copyrite” laws in the US were unconstitutional the day March 31 1790 that Mr Washington signed a plagiarism of the Statute of Annne (March 10, 1710) done by a Judge/lawyer (Benjamin Huntington) and publisher. (Noel Webster). Gougul thinks they can revise Title 17 in New York and ASMP, PPA v Gougul is failing to argue for the scores of artists who did not buy a “license to sue” in DC. Both of these actions against Gougul and 5:09-cv-05151 in Arkansas should stop pornography and create an semi-governmental search engine and literally bankrupt Gougul. The Arkansas Plaintiff asked for not less than 1 Billion against Gougul alone.

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