Internet giant Google has said it may end its operations in China following a sophisticated and targeted cyber attack originating from the country.<br/><br/>Google said the e-mail accounts of Chinese human rights activists were the primary target of the attack. Which occurred in December. <br/><br/>However the company did not accuse the Chinese government directly, but said it was no longer willing to censor its Chinese search engine-google.cn. Google said this could result in closing the site and its Chinese offices. <br/><br/>The top executive of its Chinese rival Baidu called the move hypocritical and financially motivated. <br/><br/>The search engine has now said it will hold talks with the government in the coming weeks to look at operating an unfiltered search engine with in the law in the country, though no changes to filtering had yet been made. Google launched google .cn in 2006, agreeing to some censorship of the search results, as required by the Chinese government.<br/>
News On AIR | January 13, 2010 9:38 PM
Google may end operations in China