Business Standard

Pichai makes strong case for Google’s return to China Sundar Pichai

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA

Google's India-born CEO Sundar Pichai made a strong case for the search giant's return to China, saying it is already helping Chinese companies gain global access.

Google was shut down in China in 2010 following a showdown with the government over censor policies. Since then Google, Gmail, Youtube and its other products are banned in the world's second largest economy.

"A lot of work Google does is to help Chinese companies", the 45-year-old Google CEO, who has a BTech degree from IIT Kharagpur, said at a state-run global internet conference at the Chinese city of Wuzen.

The conference was also addressed by Apple CEO Tim Cook and Chinese President Xi Jinping.

"Many small and medium-sized businesses in China take advantage of Google to get their products to many other countries outside of China," Pichai told the meeting, Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post reported.

After the ban, Google subsequent­ly shifted its operations to Hong Kong.

In its absence, Chinese firms like Tencent, Alibaba, Baidu and JD.com emerged most powerful players in China and abroad.

Google and its products can be accessed in China through Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) over which Beijing has stepped up a crackdown in recent times. Apple this year agreed to the Chinese government's requests to remove dozens of virtual private network (VPN) apps services that allow Chinese users to access blocked websites from its local App Store.

Skype, the calling app, was removed from its mainland App Store this autumn. Pichai's attendance at the state sponsored internet meeting came after China recently lifted the ban on Google translatio­n services.

Besides Google, a number of global social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter remain banned in China over fears that their presence would open-up to millions of China's social media users marginalis­ing the official media.

In his address, Cook said "the theme of this conference – developing a digital economy for openness and shared benefits – is a vision we at Apple share", adding that Apple "is proud to have worked alongside many of our partners in China to help build a community that will join a common future in cyberspace".

The World Internet Conference in Wuzhen, near Shanghai, is an annual gathering of mainly Chinese internet officials and internet company executives as well as bureaucrat­s from developing countries.

“MANY SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZED BUSINESSES IN CHINA TAKE ADVANTAGE OF GOOGLE TO GET THEIR PRODUCTS TO MANY OTHER COUNTRIES OUTSIDE OF CHINA”

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