‘Google spreads porn’

BEIJING – CHINA accused Google Inc on Thursday of spreading pornography after Chinese users were unable to connect to the search giant’s website, while Washington called on Beijing to scrap its order for personal computers to be equipped with Internet-filtering software.

asia-google ‘We have found that the English version of google.com has spread lots of pornographic, lewd and vulgar content, which is in serious violation of Chinese laws and regulations,’ said foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang at a news briefing. He said authorities summoned Google representatives and told them to ‘remove the material immediately’.

Chinese Internet users were unable to connect to Google’s main search site or its China-based service, google.cn, beginning Wednesday evening

Mr Qin did not respond to questions about whether the government was responsible for the outage. But he said he hoped the problem can be ‘resolved immediately’.

Meanwhile, US Commerce Secretary Gary Locke and Trade Representative Ron Kirk, in a letter to Chinese officials, called on Beijing to revoke its order for the ‘Green Dam Youth Escort’ filtering software to be pre-installed or supplied on a disc with all new PCs in China starting July 1. They warned the rule ‘poses a serious barrier to trade’ and said the software might pose security risks.

‘China is putting companies in an untenable position by requiring them, with virtually no public notice, to pre-install software that appears to have broad-based censorship implications and network security issues,’ Mr Locke said in a statement.

China encourages Internet use for education and business, and has the largest population of Internet users at more than 298 million. But the communist government tries to block material deemed obscene or subversive and operates the world’s most extensive Web monitoring and filtering system.

Mr Locke and Mr Kirk’s letter said Beijing might have violated World Trade Organisation rules that require governments to give companies advance notice of rule changes, an explanation and time to comment.

Mr Locke and Mr Kirk’s letter raised the possibility that Washington might challenge China’s rule in the WTO. The United States and European Union filed WTO complaints Tuesday accusing China of improperly favouring its domestic industries by restricting exports of industrial raw materials. — AP

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