Mercury (Hobart)

Google, Tencent hint at tie-up

- Shanghai

INTERNET titans Google and Tencent yesterday signalled possible future collaborat­ion on developing new technologi­es as the US and Chinese firms announced a long-term patent-sharing agreement.

The companies gave no details on the scope or nature of the potential co-operation but said in a joint statement they “are open to deeper collaborat­ion in the future on innovative new technologi­es”.

“By working together on agreements such as this, tech companies can focus on building better products and services for their users,” Google’s head of patents, Mike Lee, said.

Sam Xu, head of intellectu­al property at Tencent, added that the patent agreement would “advance the collaborat­ion between two leading technology companies”.

California-based Google already has similar cross-licensing tie-ups with Samsung, LG and others, which are typical industry arrangemen­ts between corporatio­ns designed to minimise patent infringeme­nts.

But any co-operation between the US search giant and China’s all-conquering tech leader — the world’s secondand fifth-largest companies by market value — is bound to generate buzz in the IT world.

Google effectivel­y withdrew its search engine from China’s internet landscape in 2010 in a row over censorship and cyber-attacks, and many of its services remain blocked.

But there have been hints of a thaw in relations. Chinese internet regulators recently allowed access to its translatio­n product, and last month Google announced it would open a new artificial intelligen­ce research centre in Beijing.

The agreement with Tencent would apply to a broad range of products, the companies said, without giving any specifics.

Tencent operates China’s ubiquitous WeChat messaging platform and is the country’s leader in social media and gaming.

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