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October 22, 2007 10:04 AM PDT

China accused of rerouting search traffic to Baidu

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Reports have surfaced that China is redirecting traffic from foreign search engines operated by Google, Microsoft and Yahoo to homegrown Baidu.com.

According to various reports online, some online users in China attempting to access Google.com, Microsoft's Live.com and Yahoo.com search sites have been redirected to China-based Baidu.com.

Blog site TechCrunch reported that Chinese traffic to Google's blog search engine was being rerouted to Baidu. TechCrunch later published another article saying a similar situation was observed with the other two search giants.

Vivian Wong, a manager at CB Richard Ellis in Shanghai, said visits to the three search engines showed Baidu's home page instead.

Beijing-based David Feng wrote in his blog on Thursday that he was able to gain access to both Google and Yahoo, but not Microsoft's Live.com or Yahoo-owned search engine AltaVista.

However, Ori Elraviv, chief executive of Dragon Ports in Beijing, said he had no problems getting through to the sites. "I find such an occurrence really hard to believe. Blocking a service is one thing; diverting it to a competitor is a completely different story." Dragon Ports is a developer of mobile applications.

Google has, however, confirmed the traffic-rerouting episodes. In response to queries, Google sent similar statements to The Register and search engine blogger Danny Sullivan, noting: "While this is clearly unfortunate, we've seen this happen before and are confident that service will be restored to our users in the very near future."

China has been involved in previous allegations of Internet censorship, though the government has denied such claims.

Incidentally, Google sold its minority stake in Baidu last year, explaining that it was doing so to focus on building the Chinese version of its search engine, Google.cn.

Victoria Ho of ZDNet Asia reported from Singapore.

See more CNET content tagged:
Baidu.com Inc., China, search engine, TechCrunch, Beijing

Add a Comment (Log in or register) (8 Comments)
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Mute Point
by Al E. Gator October 22, 2007 11:11 AM PDT
China owns us... so what does anyone expect, Poison dog food,
poison toys, poisoned internet... what next? Poisoned blue jeans...
Reply to this comment
There is no such thing as a 'mute point'
by eccesignum October 22, 2007 12:02 PM PDT
The word is 'moot'.

http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=moot
View reply
boycott
by gggg sssss October 22, 2007 3:58 PM PDT
Anybody who invests in this steaming pile has got rocks in their heads. It's like investing in the building of nukes to kill us. Run away as fast as you can. And stop buying cr*p made in China. Buy Canadian, Mexican and start turning around the wholesale transfer of our econamy to the Chinese government.
View reply
Typical China
by t8 October 23, 2007 2:00 PM PDT
No one does this sort of thing to them. Imagine if the US rerouted Baidu traffic to Google?

What do you expect from a country that harvests the organs of their citizens.
Reply to this comment
"Search Giant" face China still a chicken
by X-C3PO October 30, 2007 7:03 PM PDT
whatever google says for its mission .....
google the only goal is $$$.
Reply to this comment
by monchakib November 17, 2008 4:03 AM PST
All the best search engines piled into one. Including Google, Yahoo, sport search engines, science and medical search engines, encylopedia search engines, government and legal search engines, education search engines, news search engines, meta search engines.....
http://www.allthebestsearchengines.blogspot.com
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