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The hinC a Beat Blog Archive 2008-2012 Beat Archive

2010 Reading Round-Up: and China

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"Reading Round-Up: Google and China" (2010). The China Beat Blog Archive 2008-2012. 688. https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/chinabeatarchive/688

This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the China Beat Archive at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in The hinC a Beat Blog Archive 2008-2012 by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. Reading Round-Up: Google and China January 13, 2010 in The Five-List Plan by The China Beat | Permalink Stories about Google’s announcement that it will no longer censor its Chinese search engine, and that the company is reevaluating its presence in China, have been showing up at a breakneck speed over the past two days. While we anticipate that much more will be written about this development, here are some of the pieces that have caught our attention so far:

1. Rebecca MacKinnon at the Wall Street Journal, “Google Gets on the Right Side of History.”

2. Reuters (via ), “U.S., Google And China Square Off Over Internet.”

3. James Fallows, , “The Google news: China enters its Bush-Cheney Era.”

4. Joel Martinson at Danwei, “Google, Baidu, and wild speculation.”

5. Hat tip to China Digital Times for pointing us to this solid round-up at Shanghaiist on “Everything (almost) that’s happened with Google + China so far.”CDT is also compiling a page featuring links to news and opinions about this story.

6. Evan Osnos at conducted a Q-and-A with James Mulvenon of the Center for Intelligence Research and Analysis.

7. Juliet Ye and James T. Areddy at the Wall Street Journal’s “China Real Time Report,” “Flowers for Google in China.”

Tags: Google