"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." It's with this sentence that David Drummond the Legal Chief Officer of Google has qualified the attack on the number one web research company in world by Chinese hackers.
[...] Furthermore, Google in the past had already faced some difficulties regarding the Chinese market. China often blocked uncensored Google services such as; You-Tube, Picasa web albums and Blogger. Plus, the competition of Baidu, (Beijing-based company listed on America's NASDAQ exchange) dwarfed Google's share of the Internet browser business in China. China has also received criticism for actions leading outside of its land. Regarding the development of African's countries such as Sudan for example, China has discovered an interest in helping many poor countries. [...]
[...] Google assume that is too important to not confront China to its responsibility. This is why the recent declarations are choked and may involve the withdrawal of Google from China. In assumption it would happened, Google would be the first big-brand foreign company to do so citing freedom of speech in many years. Indeed, even the Western governments such as France barely mentioned the current issue about the human-right in China. Governments do not want to lose their juicy contracts in this crisis period, so they do not protest in order to reflect their values. [...]
[...] have neither given nor received nor have I tolerated others' use of unauthorized aid.” Bibliography Corporate complicity in Internet censorship in China : who cares for the global compact or the Global Online Freedom Act ? 2007 Google's China problem: U.S. technology companies come under fire for helping China police the internet.(police investigates with email address from the . An article from: New York Times Upfront by Howard W. French (Digital - Aug 2007) Could Google bring freedom to China? After years of interference from the Chinese government, Google puts its foot down.(Cover story): An article from: New York Times Upfront by Nicholas D. [...]
[...] China's economic prosperity is facing some major problems called Chinese bubbles”. In other words, experts analyzed the Chinese's situation similar to the Japanese's situation in the 1980's. The source of potential pop of the “economic bubble” is characterized by excessive lending, overinvestment and overvalued share and house prices. Nevertheless, this analysis of the Chinese's economic situation is a controversy by the statistics which exposed another view. Indeed, many hard numbers are pointing sharply upwards such as; car sales jumped by industrial profits rose by export up by 18% and import by 56%. [...]
[...] China is willing to overtake the battle with the US because of the fact that China refrains from delivering lectures on political and human freedom. In other words, they closed their eyes on how the money is used, which submit some African governments (Sudan) to finance civil war. In the Darfur conflict, China has been accused to supply the arms which are used in the genocide and they have also denied their implication, but despite this, they buy 65% of the Sudanese oil resource. [...]
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