Google could find new road in China
The company's surprise statement on Tuesday that it
was no longer ready to censor search results in
But analysts and business experts on Wednesday said
Google's past clashes with powerful companies and industries, and the
importance of the Chinese market to Google's future, suggest that self-imposed
exile from
Hard lines in previous battles have been negotiating
tactics and could be this time, too, they said.
"I'm sure they will be pragmatic, Google is a
very dynamic company," said Christopher Tang, a professor at the UCLA
Anderson School of Management. "I doubt they will walk away like that. The
presence in
While Google has struggled to compete with local
powerhouse Baidu Inc,
"As Google grows they're breaking into new
markets, and they're challenging the status quo on a lot of things," said
Canaccord Adams analyst Jeff Rath.
In
But many businesses and industries have been
threatened in other ways by Google's expansion, and the company has compromised
in some of those clashes.
PAST BATTLES POINT TO
Google's business of offering free products and
services has helped it steamroll into many new markets in recent years, from
books to wireless phones.
While Google has insisted it had the right to scan
thousands of library books and put them online, the company chose to settle a
class action suit in 2008 bought by authors and publishers' groups.
It agreed to a $125 million settlement that would
create a books rights registry, where authors and publishers register works and
are paid for books that Google puts online.
Google attempted to crack open the wireless phone
market, which has traditionally been controlled by communications companies. But
after an initial clash, it has opted to partner some incumbent wireless firms
rather than continue its unilateral assault.
Some say that pragmatic approach could work in
POSSIBLE COMPROMISES
UCLA's Tang said Google could reach an agreement with
The Chinese government censors much of the Web that is
viewable to Chinese surfers and potentially could allow Google to operate an
unfiltered Chinese language version of the Web site from that content, said
Stanford University Graduate School of Business Professor Haim Mendelson.
The government then would censor, but Google would
not.
While Mendelson said he thought it was more likely
Google would leave
"Google has some interest in maintaining a
presence in
"The Chinese government wants to project an image
of the country where they do want
Source: reuters.com