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Google’s decision a rare show of defiance in China

on http://www.mop.com pleaded, “Google please don’t go. We can’t let you go. Real man, we support you.” A photo on a Chinese Web site showed a visitor outside the Google building bowing in a traditional gesture of respect.

China’s growing consumer market is especially important to many companies at a time when global demand has plunged. The government is forecasting 8.3 percent economic growth for 2009 and China is on track to overtake Japan as the second-largest economy.

China has the world’s most-populous Internet market, with 338 million people online as of June, and foreign Internet companies eager for a share of that. Despite risking damage to their reputations by cooperating with government-imposed censorship and strictures, Western companies have struggled to make headway against intense competition from Chinese rivals – rivals who enjoy the fact that the Chinese government writes rules which tilt the playing field in favor of Chinese companies. Yahoo, eBay Inc., and others have given up and turned over control of their China operations to local partners. Google is the last global Internet company to manage its own China arm.

Google trails local competitor Baidu Inc. but has gained market share at the expense of smaller competitors. Google had 31.8 percent of search revenues in 2009, versus 60.9 percent for Baidu, according to Analysys.

Baidu.com’s U.S. shares rose 14 percent in trading Wednesday morning, while Google stock dipped 2.5 percent.

UKPA reports that Google created its China-based Google.cn site in 2006, agreeing to censor results by excluding sites to which access was blocked by government filters, popularly known as the Great Firewall of China. Despite that cooperation, Beijing accused Google last year of spreading pornography and access to the site was temporarily blocked. The company’s video site, YouTube.com, is unavailable to users in China.

Google said Tuesday it would stop censoring search results on Google.cn. That would allow users to find politically sensitive photos and Web sites abroad, though downloading them might still be barred by government filters. It also said it had discovered that computer hackers, in all likelihood government intelligence operatives, had tricked human-rights activists into exposing their e-mail accounts to outsiders.

On Wednesday, Google.cn said its top search term of the day was “Tiananmen,” possibly due to Web surfers looking for material on the government’s violent crackdown on 1989 pro-democracy protests. The No. 2 search topic was “Google leaving China.”

Google.cn appeared to be still censoring results. A search for the banned Falun Gong spiritual movement returned a message saying the browser could not open the page. A notice on the site says some results were deleted in line with regulations.

Google managers told employees to go home and they did not know whether to come back Thursday, said an employee who spoke on condition of anonymity because she was not authorized to talk to reporters. Google is a sought-after employer and has long had its pick of China’s brightest university graduates.

Ran Yunfei, a magazine editor and blogger in Sichuan province in China’s southwest who is known for his liberal views, likened Google’s threatened departure to that of a dissident leaving China for freedom. “I don’t support the departure of all dissidents. Only those obedient to the officials would remain. That would too well suit the taste of the dictatorial regime,” Ran wrote on his blog, which is hosted outside China.

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