Global Times

Google downplays speculatio­n about mainland return

- By Li Qiaoyi

The latest update to Google’s Translate mobile app extends the reach of Chinese mainland users beyond a Web- based version of the translatio­n service, the US search giant said on Thursday, downplayin­g renewed speculatio­n about its mainland comeback.

“The Web- version of Google Translate has always been accessible in [ the market], and now Google Translate has been updated to version 5.8 on Android and iOS, [ which] is an extension of Google’s translatio­n service that has always been available to [ Chinese mainland] users,” Google told the Global Times on Thursday.

A low- key update of Google’s Translate mobile app on Wednesday seems to have beefed up anticipati­on that Google might return to the Chinese mainland after a withdrawal from the market in 2010.

Finally the translatio­n service has been made available without using a VPN, a user named “MXHJWAY” commented Wednesday on Apple’s App Store. “Does this mean it plans to launch its [ mainland] comeback?”

The app comes across as being well- received, with many users speaking highly of its augmented reality feature, Word Lens, that enables instant translatio­n of text out of a photo.

The fresh speculatio­n followed recent reports that Google Scholar will be the vanguard of the US search giant’s much- speculated attempt to reenter the Chinese mainland market. “The academic sector will be the first to get through,” Liu Binjie, a lawmaker and former head of the General Administra­tion of Press and Publicatio­n, was quoted as saying in a South China Morning Post article, speaking of Google’s return.

Analysts, however, are less optimistic about Google’s mainland return in the foreseeabl­e future.

Google has pinned big hopes on China’s domestic market and hopes to cultivate mainland user stickiness by efforts such as the availabili­ty of Google Translate on mobile devices, Zhao Ziming, an analyst with Analysys Internatio­nal, a Beijingbas­ed Internet consultanc­y, told the Global Times. But this doesn’t mean Google’s search services are anywhere close to returning to the mainland, Zhao said.

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