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07-04-2010, 05:03 AM
Google's beef with China's government is making international headlines again. The company's Chinese license as an Internet content provider is up for renewal this week, and the government has made it clear it won't accept Google automatically forwarding Web surfers to human hair wigs (http://www.naturalwigs2u.com/custom-shakira-hair-styles-ncc045-big-wave-p-598.html) uncensored search engine in Hong Kong, as the company has done since January. In response, this week Google started sending surfers to a landing page where they have to click manually to get to the Hong Kong site, in hopes that that will placate the government. That is actually quite similar to what Chinese Web surfers could do before January. Until then, they could choose to conduct searches via the censored domestic Google.cn site or navigate from a link on the Chinese site to Google.com, which wasn't censored by Google ( GOOG - news - people ) itself but was still subject to the filters in China's firewall. That was a concession reformers in China had worked out.China today is nothing like the old Soviet Union. Despite Google founder Sergey Brin's fears, compromises can be made between companies and the government, but companies natural hair (http://www.naturalwigs2u.com/)still need to follow the law. In the end, Google decided it couldn't live with the deal it had struck and decided to stop censoring its own China-based site, which led to its first confrontation with the government and ultimately its decision to effectively shut down Google.cn.The ball is now in China's court. How should the Chinese government act? If it wants to, it can reject Google's license application and shut down the operation completely, but should it? Should it allow the current situation to continue and allow Chinese Web users to manually click through to Hong Kong? Or maybe demand something else?China's leadership needs to be very measured in how it responds to Google in the next few days. With the world already concerned about the yuan exchange rate and China's remy hair (http://www.naturalwigs2u.com/custom-shakira-hair-styles-ncc045-big-wave-p-598.html) economic strength relative to America's stalled economy, the government should take this opportunity to act calmly, as a responsible member of the international community. If not, it could provoke trade protectionism, and that would help nobody.The smart move would be to delay making any decision on Google's license approval until the issue dies down again in the overseas press. It should neither approve nor deny for the moment, but let the status quo continue. In the last six months Chinese netizens searching on the Hong Kong site have caused no security threat to China . After all, the Great Firewall can block any sites the government really wants to limit access to