Access to Microsoft's Bing restored for some users in China
Access to Microsoft's Bing restored for some users in
China
By Josh Horwitz & Brenda Goh JANUARY 24, 2019 / 6:06
AM
(Reuters) - Microsoft Corp’s Bing search engine was
accessible for some internet users in mainland China late on Thursday,
indicating that online access to the foreign technology service may have been
restored within the country’s Great Firewall.
Bing’s website was accessible on mobile as well as
broadband connections, though some users still reported occasional difficulties
and it was not clear whether resumption to service was temporary or permanent.
Microsoft did not immediately respond to requests for
comment. It said on Wednesday that Bing had been blocked in China and that it
was trying to determine its next steps.
Searches performed on Bing’s China website at cn.bing.com
from within mainland China on Wednesday directed users to a page saying the
server could not be reached.
The government’s Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC)
watchdog did not respond to faxed questions about Bing’s blocked website.
Bing was the only major foreign search engine accessible
from within China’s so-called Great Firewall, with Microsoft censoring search
results on sensitive topics, in accordance with Chinese government policy.
Its main competitor in mainland China is Baidu, which
this week pledged to improve its media aggregating service after a complaint
about the quality of the service and its search results went viral on social
media.
Should Bing be blocked, it would mark Microsoft’s second
setback in China since November 2017, when its Skype internet phone call and
messaging service was pulled from Apple and Android app stores.
Microsoft also has a partnership with Chinese data center
provider 21Vianet to sell its Azure and Office 365 products.
Alphabet’s Google search platform has been blocked in
China since 2010. Google CEO Sundar Pichai said in December that it has no
plans to relaunch a search engine in China, though it is continuing to study
the idea amid increased scrutiny of big technology firms.
Microsoft says Bing has been blocked in China
China’s President Xi Jinping has accelerated control of
the internet in China since 2016 as the ruling Communist Party has sought to
crack down on dissent on social media.
In a statement on Wednesday, the CAC said it had deleted
more than 7 million pieces of online information and 9,382 mobile apps.
The watchdog also criticized technology company Tencent’s
news app for spreading “vulgar information”.
Reporting by Josh Horwitz in Shanghai and Gaurika Juneja
in Bengaluru; additional reporting by Cate Cadell, Stephen Nellis and Vibhuti
Sharma; Editing by Darren Schuettler and David Goodman
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