China censorship damaged us, Google founders admit

Tuesday January 30th 2007, 6:11 pm
Filed under: Online news

Google’s decision to censor its search engine in China was bad for the company, its founders admitted yesterday. Google, launched in 1998 by two Stanford University dropouts, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, was accused of selling out and reneging on its ‘Don’t be evil’ motto when it launched in China in 2005. The company modified the version of its search engine in China to exclude controversial topics such as the Tiananmen Square massacre or the Falun Gong movement, provoking a backlash in its core western markets. Asked whether he regretted the decision, Brin admitted yesterday: ‘On a business level, that decision to censor… was a net negative.’ Brin said the company had suffered because of the damage to its reputation in the US and Europe. (Media Guardian,January 30, 2007)

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