Category: News

  • Google’s China Exposure: ~$600 Million In Sales This Year, Lots Of Future Growth (GOOG, BIDU)

    Google Eric schmidt larry page

    What’s Google’s China business worth?

    If Google follows through with its ultimatum to the Chinese government — let us run Google.cn uncensored, or we could pull out of China — Google could end up losing a decent amount of revenue this year.

    In a note this evening, JPMorgan analyst Imran Khan estimates Google’s China revenue at around $600 million this year, with segment margins around 15% to 20%.

    Khan also says “this could potentially have a far-reaching impact on the company’s overall long-term growth rate.”

    Meanwhile, it’s great news for Baidu, China’s search leader. Which is why traders’ initial reactions to Google’s news were to send Baidu stock up about 7% after hours, and Google’s stock down 1%.

    Related: Did The Chinese Government Hack Google?

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • What Can I Do With My Stockpile of Jams? Good Questions

    Q: Somehow in the crazy holiday gift givings, I ended up with SEVEN different jars of homemade jams and marmalades. The flavors are interesting and all over the place (jalapeno peach, boysenberry, cranberry marmalade), and I like jam and toast as much as the next guy, but do you have any suggestions for some recipes that use jams/jellies to help me make a dent in this massive stockpile?

    Sent by Colin

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  • Lawsuits: AT&T collects illegal taxes on Internet access




    AT&T’s wireless unit has been hit by numerous federal lawsuits over the last month, each arguing that the mobile telephony giant is illegally collecting nonexistent “taxes” on phone data access plans. The cases have been filed in states as varied as Georgia, Indiana, and Alabama, but all make the same charges against AT&T—and all use the same idiosyncratic spelling of “I-Phone.”

    That’s because the same lawyers are involved in each one.

    Read the rest of this article...


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    Article

  • Africans nominated in the 41st NAACP Image Awards

    The NAACP Image awards celebrate the outstanding achievements and performances of people of color in the arts (motion picture, television, recording, and literature), as well as those
    individuals or groups who promote social justice through their creative endeavors.

    Victor Sila

    Victor Sila

    There are several African nominees in the mix this year who we can honestly say truly deserve it.  Gabourey Sidibe is having an astounding year with her first film, ‘Precious‘, which brought many to tears as they experienced the horrors of abuse with her character.  Sila and the Afrofunk Experience have been nominated for their song, ‘Black President’, putting them in a well-deserved limelight.  Oumou Sangare’s song, Seya, has also been nominated in the Outstanding World Music Album category. 

    Farai Chideya, the African-American/Zimbabwean author is nominated for Outstanding Literary Work – Debut Author for her novel, ‘Kiss the Sky: A Novel’, which is currently on the Essence book list.

    The complete list of African nominees are listed below:

    Outstanding Actor in a Motion Picture
    – Idris Elba – “Obsessed” (Screen Gems)

    Outstanding Actress in a Motion Picture
    – Gabourey Sidibe – “Precious: Based on the Novel “Push” by Sapphire” (Lionsgate)
    – Sophie Okonedo – “Skin” (Jour De Fete Films)

    Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture
    – Chiwetel Ejiofor – “2012” (Columbia Pictures)

    Outstanding World Music Album
    – “Black President” – Sila and the Afrofunk Experience (Visila Records)
    – “ReCreation” – Zap Mama (Heads Up International/Concord Music Group)
    – “Seya” – Oumou Sangare (Nonesuch/World Circuit)
    Outstanding Literary Work – Debut Author
    – “Kiss the Sky: A Novel” – Farai Chideya (Atria Books)

    Congratulations to all of them. Win or lose, they are still projecting a positive image of
    Africans and we applaud them!

  • Exercise Motivation: Don’t Let Your Fitness Program Become “Extinct”

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    Just like the dinosaurs, if you’re not careful your exercise program can take a permanent dirt nap.
    My first article for That’s Fit.ca was on New Year’s resolutions and learning to love exercise. It discussed B. F. Skinner’s operant conditioning and … Read more

     

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  • There’s a Reason We Moderate Our Comments So Carefully [Humor]

    Because if we didn’t, we’d be overrun with dudes like this. And nobody wants that. [CollegeHumor]







  • Sticky Lemon Chicken and Rolling Trash Bins Delicious links for 1.13.2010

    2010_01_13-Slinkage.jpgPlus marshmallows with an unusual ingredient, and cute teabag design.

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  • A couple Los Angeles pans I took Sunday

    Thought I’d share the clear views 😎

  • Những sự kiện tiĂȘu biểu SSC VN forum năm 2009

    Lẽ ra tĂ­nh viết bĂ i tổng hợp thống kĂȘ những diễn biến vĂ  sự kiện chĂ­nh của forum trong năm vừa qua lĂąu rồi nhưng mĂŁi hĂŽm nay mới cĂł đủ “ tinh thần vĂ  lực lượng, thời gian vĂ  chất xĂĄm ” để lĂ m một bĂ i viết cho mọi người cĂčng thảo luận về những vấn đề nổi cộm trong năm vừa qua tại diễn đĂ n yĂȘu dấu của chĂșng ta :cheers1:
    Dưới đĂąy lĂ  một vĂ i sự kiện tiĂȘu biểu nhất năm vừa qua tại VN forum theo suy nghĩ của Milkyway:
    1) Năm vừa qua chứng kiến sự bĂčng nổ về số lượng cũng như bĂ i đĂłng gĂłp của những thĂ nh viĂȘn 9x tham gia vĂ o diễn đĂ n. ChĂ­nh nhờ vậy đĂŁ đem đến cho diễn đĂ n chĂșng ta sự tươi vui của tuổi trẻ, tĂ­nh nhĂ­ nhảnh vui nhộn trong cĂĄc comment vĂ  những vấn đề cần thảo luận ^_^ nhưng đĂąy cũng chĂ­nh lĂ  đầu mối gĂąy ra hiềm khĂ­ch gĂąy sự vĂ  kĂ­ch động lẫn nhau khiến forum chĂșng ta mất đoĂ n kết nội bộ, lĂ m xung đột giữa 2 thread HN vĂ  SG luĂŽn trong tĂŹnh trạng căng thẳng vĂ  nĂłng bỏng, lĂ m cho tĂłc của mod bạc đi vĂ i sợi do phải tĂŹm xoĂĄ những bĂ i viết sai chủ đề…
    2) Mr Coolink, một trong những thĂ nh viĂȘn cộm cĂĄn nhất trong forum mĂ©m bị cho lĂȘn thiĂȘn đường để gặp ChĂșa vĂ  thread NhĂ  thờ VN đối mặt với nguy cơ bị bỏ hoang do tĂ­nh hớt lẻo vĂ  xuyĂȘn tạc chống Đảng vĂ  NhĂ  nước VN XHCN. Nhưng do cĂł tĂ­nh cĂĄch vui vẻ nhĂ­ nhảnh, nĂłi chuyện vui tĂ­nh vĂ  nhận được sự khoan hồng từ mod cũng như xĂ©t đến những cĂŽng lao đĂłng gĂłp cho forum trong việc chống lại sự xĂąm lược từ phĂ­a tụi TĂ u nĂȘn coolink đĂŁ được welcome trở lại ^_^
    3) Mr Chinatown trong một thời gian dĂ i luĂŽn tạo ra những signature với mục đĂ­ch bĂŽi nhọ hĂŹnh ảnh thủ đĂŽ HĂ  Nội nghĂŹn năm văn hiến của chĂșng ta, đồng thời cĂČn mang mục đĂ­ch xỏ xiĂȘn cĂĄc mem HN khiến tĂŹnh hĂŹnh trong forum nhiều lĂșc đĂŁ trở nĂȘn cực kỳ căng thẳng, cĂĄc mem đụng mặt nhau lĂ  chửi lộn, nhĂŹn thấy comment của nhau lĂ  muốn ăn tươi nuốt sống…:bash:
    4) ĐĂĄp lại tĂ­nh hung hăng của Chinatown, hĂ ng loạt cĂĄc mem HN đĂŁ tổ chức đĂĄnh hội đồng hắn bằng những lời lẽ nặng nề vĂ  đỉnh điểm của vụ việc lĂ  đĂŁ lĂŽi kĂ©o hầu hết cĂĄc mem vĂŽ đĂąm chĂ©m nhau tại tất cả cĂĄc mặt trận từ kinh tế xĂŁ hội đến kiến trĂșc của từng cĂŽng trĂŹnh xĂąy dựng…khiến mod phải lĂ m việc cật lực vĂ  vất vĂ  lắm mới dẹp tắt được phần nĂ o cuộc nội chiến. Tuy nhiĂȘn căng thẳng cĂł thể xảy ra bất cứ lĂșc nĂ o vĂŹ một vĂ i mem của cả 2 thread rất thĂ­ch vĂ o thread của nhau gĂąy hấn, chọc phĂĄ lĂ m thread đang yĂȘn bĂŹnh bỗng chốc trở thĂ nh một chiến trường…
    5) GiĂĄo sư tiến sĩ tin học kiĂȘm nghiĂȘn cứu sinh Jimmyfa đĂŁ liĂȘn tục chế tạo ra rất nhiều loại virus cĂł đĂłng gĂłp thĂŹ Ă­t mĂ  phĂĄ phĂĄch thĂŹ nhiều vĂŽ forum chĂșng ta, tại mọi ngĂłc ngĂĄch hang cĂčng ngĂ” hẻm trong mỗi thread đều cĂł virus mang thương hiệu Jimmyfa vĂ  phong cĂĄch rất Jimmyfa 😀
    6) Năm vửa qua chứng kiến một thực trạng buồn đĂł lĂ  sự xuống cấp cực kỳ nghiĂȘm trọng về đạo đức, phẩm hạnh vĂ  đặc biệt lĂ  tĂ­nh vệ sinh con người của một bộ phận cĂĄc mem với hĂ ng loạt những hĂŹnh ảnh mất vệ sinh, thiếu văn hoĂĄ vĂ  cực kỳ dơ bẩn được post vĂ o cĂĄc thread của nhau khiến dư luận bất bĂŹnh vĂ  phản ứng rất gay gắt, lĂ m mod phải nhăn mặt bịt mũi đi dọn dẹp cho từng thread được sạch sẽ trở lại >”<

    ^^ mĂŹnh nĂȘu ra những vấn đề trĂȘn đĂąy ko cĂł Ăœ muốn nhắc lại những hiềm khĂ­ch đĂŁ qua, nhưng rĂ” rĂ ng chĂșng ta cần nhĂŹn nhận lại tất cả vấn đề vĂ  qua đĂł dần khắc phục khĂŽng để xảy ra những tĂŹnh trạng tương tự trong năm nay  rất mong cĂĄc mem trong forum đều giữ được bĂŹnh tĩnh vĂ  giới hạn phĂĄt ngĂŽn của mĂŹnh trong từng vấn đề, trĂĄnh những xung đột cĂŁi vĂŁ ko cần thiết, ko nĂȘn đề cập đến những vẫn đề nhạy cảm dễ xảy ra hiểu lầm lẫn nhau. Đồng Ăœ lĂ  mỗi người đều cĂł Ăœ kiến của riĂȘng mĂŹnh vĂ  cĂĄc thĂ nh viĂȘn đều muốn bảo vệ quyền lợi vĂ  cĂł lĂČng tự hĂ o về nơi mĂŹnh đang sống nhưng sẽ lĂ  tốt hơn nếu mọi người thể hiện điều đĂł đĂșng nơi đĂșng lĂșc vĂ  đĂșng chỗ. Hi vọng trong thời gian sắp tới tĂŹnh hĂŹnh sẽ được cải thiện phần nĂ o bởi vĂŹ mĂŹnh nghĩ mọi người cũng chĂĄn ngấy cảnh thĂč hằn lẫn nhau rồi vĂ  mong cĂĄc mem bỏ qua những lời lẽ nặng nề đĂŁ dĂ nh cho nhau, nĂȘn xưng hĂŽ thĂąn mật trở lại với nhau, để cĂł thể cĂčng bắt tay nhau xĂąy dựng nĂȘn forum VN hĂčng mạnh cho bọn TĂ u MĂŁ Phi…khiếp sợ uy lực của chĂșng ta 😀
    Milkyway ^o^

  • Why I’m Not Moving to the Google Docs “G: Drive” Just Yet

    As someone who embraced the cloud early on, you’d think I’d be all over the news that Google is finally delivering the mythical “G-Drive.” Oh, they’re not calling it that, but soon you’ll be able to store whatever files you want within Google Docs. We all should have guessed this was coming — my first clue was when I noticed that Google is storing my synchronized bookmarks from Google Chrome in plain sight on Google Docs.

    So why then am I not standing on the rooftops yelling “Huzzah!” at the top of my lungs?

    On one hand, Google is beating the pants off the services I use when it comes to pricing. Google offers 1 GB for free and each GB after that is $0.25 per year. Let’s see how that compares to some of my favorite services at different levels of storage for a full year.

    With its highly scalable infrastructure, Google competes very well on pricing, as expected. So that’s a clear win, but getting at and easily using the data across all of my mobile devices is a huge factor.

    The other three services I use all offer a mobile client for either my iPhone, my Nexus One, or both. And if there isn’t a mobile client, it’s coming soon per each product’s website. Of course, Google could be working on a mobile client for access to this cloud data, but there was no word of that today. The clients I’m currently using aren’t basic access applications either.

    Take ZumoDrive’s iPhone application for example. With it, my entire music collection can be streamed from the cloud to my handset. Essentially, even an old 4 GB iPhone could have a virtually near unlimited music collection with such a setup. The built-in music player might not be quite as good as the native iTunes application, but I’ll take a slightly inferior experience over the limitations of  fixed storage any day.

    While Google’s new data storage offering will be useful to many, in its first iteration, it sounds like the real benefit will be for devices like laptops and netbooks over handsets. There’s definite value in it, but for now it appears like a place to park your data for a small fee. There’s plenty of places that already do that — and so much more for a wider range device types.

    For now, I’m going to pass on the new service. I’ll likely test it out using the free 1 GB of space, but until I can easily use that data extensively on all of my devices, I’m sticking with what I use today. Ideally, I want my cloud data to act like, look like and behave like local data on everything. Of course,  if I change my mind or want some cheap basic storage, I can always make the purchase from any web connected device on the fly.

    How about you? Does the new Google Docs feature appeal to you as a cloud storage service or are you going to use something else? We all have different data needs, software requirements and devices to use with the cloud, so I’m curious as to your take.

  • EvilCapitalist’s Works

    Looking for some opinions, so I’m reposting my collected works. I am Duffstuff129 on SSP.

    Constructive comments are appreciated. This represents my very first works eveolving into more recent one, about a year’s worth of stuff.

    Thanks.

    :previous: This is a bad render, but it shows the truss-supported undersection that supports the trains, and it gives a modest view of the six lane highway on top.

    :previous: This should give you a sense of scale… Also note the… streetlights. 🙂

    :previous: 2500 pointlights + 2.13 Ghz dual core = very long rendering time.

    This is a tower in a plaza type deal with a center fountain. I was going to add more buildings to the plaza (one of which I got most of the way through) but wasn’t happy with the design.

    I like what has been rendered here, but everything else is rather… bad to say the least.

    Eeach setback in the tower is 1.6 (just about the Golden Ratio) taller than the last (rounded to the next whole foot) starting at 50 feet. The building tops out at 1312 feet. This surprised me because it is almost exactly 400 meters. Weird.

    Anyways, here ya go!

    Also when rendering, I forgot to make the water in the fountain look like water. Whoops!

    Two interiors

    Predesigns….

    Side:

    Top:

    A perspective:

    Another perspective in ray tracing:

    First draft of tower:

    Base added

    Completed:

    Quick sketch of a new project…

  • Natal (RN) -Resort Tropical D’santo Cristo

    Resort na Praia de SĂŁo Miguel do Gostoso

  • Do You Need to Drink Less Alcohol? Test Results Could Shock You

    Filed under: , ,

    Are you concerned about how your weekend booze indulgences are affecting both your bottom line and your bottom? Are you tired of wasting precious Saturdays at home in bed with a hangover? According to new research by the Centre for Addiction and … Read more

     

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  • Google Finally Shows IRI Space Center [8]

    Quite a few of my friends have been urging me to write something about the “new” images of Iran’s space center that have shown up recently on Google Earth.

    The trouble is, I hate rehashing stuff I wrote about almost two years ago when I “discovered” the facility—much like Columbus “discovered” America—and wrote about it in Jane’s Intelligence Review (see Geoffrey Forden, “Smoke and Mirrors: Analyzing the Iranian missile test”, JIR, April 2008, pp. 47-51; I have never understood how the editors pick titles for my papers).

    Perhaps the most interesting part of the imagery now, given the connection between these two countries’ missile programs, is the similarity between a building at North Korea’s launch site and one at Iran’s. For those who would like to examine the site themselves, let me replicate the coordinates I published in the open literature for the first time nearly two years ago:

    35.234440° N, 53.920798°E.

  • Tupi Paulista/SP

    Vou apresentar a cidade do nosso amigo forista BrunoB. em poucas fotos que pude tirar.
    Tupi Paulista estĂĄ localizada na regiĂŁo da Nova Alta Paulista e possui 14.389 habitantes.

    Todas as imagens sĂŁo de minha autoria

    Localização

    Igreja Matriz

    Ruas da cidade

    Reparem na arborização de pés de oiti

    O prédio da cidade

    Uma galeria comercial

  • Daily Exercise: One Large Dose vs. Several Shorter Spurts

    Filed under: , ,

    With rates of obesity and obesity-related illnesses climbing in the Canadian population, it’s suggested that Canadians strive to build more activity into their daily lives in order to stay healthy or improve health. Most of us know that an active … Read more

     

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  • Vasa procena godine zavrsetka sledecih projekata u Novom Sadu

    Vasa procena godine zavrsetka sledecih projekata u Novom Sadu

    1.Most (sa tunelom ispod tvrdjave)
    2.Zezeljev(zeleznicki most)
    3.Nastavak Subotickog bulevara (Evrope) do auto-puta
    4.Zavrsetak Somborskog bulevara(deo do Cara Lazara)
    5.Ocean Eleven(River plaza mall)
    6.Bigcee (Izraelski retail centar)
    7.Merkur (na autoputu)
    8.Precistac otpadnih voda
    9.Muzej Vojvodine(kineska cetvrt?)
    10.Gradska marina (dugorocni plan)
    11.Ledena dvorana(Sajam)
    12.Opstegradski centar (Radnicka ulica)
    13.Delta retail park(hladjaca)
    14.Ikea(autoput)
    15.Eko Park(Petrovaradinska ada,Oficirac,Exit kamp)
    16.Jevrejska ulica(obnova)
    17.Tus centar(Naselje)
    18.Rodic(na autoputu pored postojeceg Rodica)
    19.Zgrada postanske stedionice(skadar na Bojani u sred centra)
    20.Obnova radnickog univerziteta(izgoreo u pozaru)
    21.Ranzirna stanica(uredjenje)
    22.Tramvaj i LRT(mozda jednog dana)
    23.Kineska fabrika traktora
    24.Hala za male sportove
    25.Gradski stadion.
    26.Novi otvoreni bazeni

    aj uzdravlje :cheers2::cheers: pa da sto manje cekamo

  • Microsoft Nudges Kids to Programming From the Playground [Voices]

    By Nick Wingfield, Reporter, The Wall Street Journal

    At an age when some kids are just beginning to play videogames, Microsoft (MSFT) wants to get youngsters to program them.

    The company just released an early PC version of a programming tool called Kodu that’s designed to make creating a game simple enough that people under ten can do it. Microsoft believes the PC version of Kodu, which is free, will broaden the audience for the tool, especially in schools. Last June, it released a version for the Xbox 360, a game console that probably isn’t at the top of the list of things schools want to buy.

    Read the rest of this post on the original site

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  • What’s the Chinese Word for Bing? Google Threatens to Leave China. [Digital Daily]

    “We actually did an evil scale and decided not to serve at all was worse evil.”

    Google CEO Eric Schmidt on the company’s decision to offer a censored version of its search services in China, Jan. 30, 2006

    google-china-bikeEvidently Google is taking its informal “don’t be evil motto” a bit more seriously these days. The search sovereign threatened late Tuesday to pull out of its operations in China after detecting a “highly sophisticated and targeted attack on [its] corporate infrastructure originating from China.” Targeted in the assault: The Gmail accounts of Chinese human rights activists.

    “These attacks and the surveillance they have uncovered–combined with the attempts over the past year to further limit free speech on the web–have led us to conclude that we should review the feasibility of our business operations in China,” Google’s chief legal officer, David Drummond, wrote in a post to the company blog.

    “We have decided we are no longer willing to continue censoring our results on Google.cn, and so over the next few weeks we will be discussing with the Chinese government the basis on which we could operate an unfiltered search engine within the law, if at all,” Drummond added. “We recognize that this may well mean having to shut down Google.cn, and potentially our offices in China.”

    Shut down Google.cn, and potentially our offices in China? Hmm. What’s the Chinese word for “Bing”?

    Drummond didn’t directly accuse the Chinese government of orchestrating the incursion, but he certainly seems to be implying there’s a link. And you’d think one would have to exist for Google (GOOG) to threaten pull out of a country that has more Internet users than the total population of the U.S.–even if its efforts to gain market share there haven’t met with the same success as in the rest of the world.

    It’s tough to stake your claim in a country where the government favors the local rival and blocks your traffic if you fail to censor. Baidu’s share of the Chinese search market in the third quarter was 77 percent, up from 75.6 percent. Google’s share for the same period? Just 17 percent, down from 19 percent.

    So, to some extent, Google can probably threaten to leave China because the country accounts for such a small portion of its revenue. On the other hand, China leads the world in Internet users and presents a hell of a market opportunity–large enough that Google willingly provided a censored version of its services as a prerequisite for doing business there. Or, rather, it used to.

    At $395.50 Baidu shares are up more than two percent after hours on the news. Google shares are down 1.6 percent at $581.01.

    Drummond’s post in full, below:

    A new approach to China

    Like many other well-known organizations, we face cyber attacks of varying degrees on a regular basis. In mid-December, we detected a highly sophisticated and targeted attack on our corporate infrastructure originating from China that resulted in the theft of intellectual property from Google. However, it soon became clear that what at first appeared to be solely a security incident–albeit a significant one–was something quite different.

    First, this attack was not just on Google. As part of our investigation we have discovered that at least twenty other large companies from a wide range of businesses–including the Internet, finance, technology, media and chemical sectors–have been similarly targeted. We are currently in the process of notifying those companies, and we are also working with the relevant U.S. authorities.

    Second, we have evidence to suggest that a primary goal of the attackers was accessing the Gmail accounts of Chinese human rights activists. Based on our investigation to date we believe their attack did not achieve that objective. Only two Gmail accounts appear to have been accessed, and that activity was limited to account information (such as the date the account was created) and subject line, rather than the content of emails themselves.

    Third, as part of this investigation but independent of the attack on Google, we have discovered that the accounts of dozens of U.S.-, China- and Europe-based Gmail users who are advocates of human rights in China appear to have been routinely accessed by third parties. These accounts have not been accessed through any security breach at Google, but most likely via phishing scams or malware placed on the users’ computers.

    We have already used information gained from this attack to make infrastructure and architectural improvements that enhance security for Google and for our users. In terms of individual users, we would advise people to deploy reputable anti-virus and anti-spyware programs on their computers, to install patches for their operating systems and to update their web browsers. Always be cautious when clicking on links appearing in instant messages and emails, or when asked to share personal information like passwords online. You can read more here about our cyber-security recommendations.

    We have taken the unusual step of sharing information about these attacks with a broad audience not just because of the security and human rights implications of what we have unearthed, but also because this information goes to the heart of a much bigger global debate about freedom of speech. In the last two decades, China’s economic reform programs and its citizens’ entrepreneurial flair have lifted hundreds of millions of Chinese people out of poverty. Indeed, this great nation is at the heart of much economic progress and development in the world today.

    We launched Google.cn in January 2006 in the belief that the benefits of increased access to information for people in China and a more open Internet outweighed our discomfort in agreeing to censor some results. At the time we made clear that “we will carefully monitor conditions in China, including new laws and other restrictions on our services. If we determine that we are unable to achieve the objectives outlined we will not hesitate to reconsider our approach to China.”

    These attacks and the surveillance they have uncovered–combined with the attempts over the past year to further limit free speech on the web–have led us to conclude that we should review the feasibility of our business operations in China. We have decided we are no longer willing to continue censoring our results on Google.cn, and so over the next few weeks we will be discussing with the Chinese government the basis on which we could operate an unfiltered search engine within the law, if at all. We recognize that this may well mean having to shut down Google.cn, and potentially our offices in China.

    The decision to review our business operations in China has been incredibly hard, and we know that it will have potentially far-reaching consequences. We want to make clear that this move was driven by our executives in the United States, without the knowledge or involvement of our employees in China who have worked incredibly hard to make Google.cn the success it is today. We are committed to working responsibly to resolve the very difficult issues raised.

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