The Daily Telegraph

Google accused of hypocrisy as it censors BBC in sop to China

- By Joseph Archer and James Cook

GOOGLE is launching a censored version of its search engine in China that will block access to sites including the BBC.

The internet giant will block access to sites banned by the country’s ruling Communist Party, including Wikipedia and BBC News, according to leaked internal documents seen by news website The Intercept. Sites and search terms about human rights, democracy and religion will also be blackliste­d.

Campaign groups have criticised Google for hypocrisy and assisting oppression, arguing that the move sets a dangerous precedent for other large organisati­ons. Google, however, is desperate to crack the lucrative Chinese market of 750million web users who could provide billions in revenue.

The Chinese search engine project, codenamed Dragonfly, has been in developmen­t since last spring and could launch within six to nine months, according to the leaked documents.

Work began speeding up on the project in December following a secret meeting between Sundar Pichai, the Google chief executive, and Wang Huning, a Chinese foreign policy adviser. Google engineers have already created a custom Android app.

Silkie Carlo, director of Big Brother Watch, the civil liberties campaign group, said that Google’s decision was “absolutely chilling”.

“Google is supposed to be a gateway to free informatio­n, not a gatekeeper,” Mrs Carlo said. “To see a tech giant and a government collude to oppress a population is a watershed moment for the digital age. Google’s alarming willingnes­s to bend to the will of the world’s most censorious government serves as a wake up call to us all.” Google shut its original Chinese search engine in 2010 after cyberattac­ks by the Chinese government aimed at human rights activists in the country and elsewhere.

The company said Chinese hackers had attempted to break into activists’ Gmail accounts and read their emails, a move which angered Google so much that it closed its Chinese search engine and allowed people to access uncensored informatio­n for several months.

Sergey Brin, Google’s co-founder who was raised in the Soviet Union until he was almost six years old, said that “our objection is to those forces of totalitari­anism” in China.

For several months, Google redirected people in mainland China to Google’s Hong Kong search engine, which didn’t filter results. And since then, Google has publicly opposed China’s internet censorship.

Eric Schmidt, then Google’s executive chairman, said in 2013 that China was “the most egregious example” of a country attempting to control the internet. But that position has softened in recent years. In January, the search engine joined an investment in Chinese live-stream mobile game platform Chushou, and earlier this month, launched a doodle game on Tencent’s social media app Wechat.

Google’s decision to comply with the Chinese government’s censorship will be controvers­ial inside the business.

The news of the app only emerged after an employee leaked confidenti­al documents to The Intercept, meaning that there are already signs of dissent inside Google. A Google spokesman said: “We don’t comment on speculatio­n about future plans.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom