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Google the internet giant will soon stop censoring China web results as said by Google CEO "Eric Schmidt". As per Eric Google is in conversation with Chinese government for same.
In last week Google said that it would no longer censor web result in China even if that meant to close down there operations in China.
"Google like to expand its business in china, We like Chinese people and our Chinese employees", Schimdt said.
"As far as Cyber attacks are concern Google will take necessary technical steps to prevent such attack in future",he said.
The number of Internet user in china is 384 million by the end of 2009, One of the government linked industry body bring this information.
The online population in the world's most populous nation increased by 28.9 percent last year from the end of 2008, the China Internet Network Information Centre (CNNIC) said in a report published on its website.
Users accessing the Internet with mobile phones jumped by 120 million last year to 233 million, with the fast expansion of the country's third-generation (3G) network, allowing high-speed transmission of images and video.
The report added that Chinese web users are most interested in music, news and search engine services. This CNNIC report come after when world largest search engine company Google threaten china to pack up his business from china due to cyber attacks.
Lawyers suing China for 2.2 billion US dollars in an Internet-censoring software piracy case said they came under cyberattack this week.
Attorneys at the California law firm of Gipson Hoffman & Pancione said that on Monday they began receiving "Trojan emails" crafted to trick them into opening files booby-trapped with malicious software code.
"Trojan emails are specially constructed to retrieve data from the target's computer and often allow the sender to gain access to the target's computer or to the company's servers," the firm said in a release.
"It has not yet been determined whether any of the attempts were successful."
The law firm last week filed a lawsuit on behalf of Cybersitter accusing China of using the California company's copyrighted software censorship programs being mandated for computers sold in that country.
Google threatened Tuesday to shut down its operations in China after uncovering what it said were "highly sophisticated" cyberattacks aimed at Chinese human rights activists.
China-based cyber spies struck the Internet giant and at least 20 other unidentified firms in an apparent bid to hack into the email accounts of activists around the world, Google said Tuesday.
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called on Beijing to explain the cyberattacks.
Related article: US calls on China to explain attacks
"We look to the Chinese government for an explanation," the chief US diplomat said in a released statement.
"The ability to operate with confidence in cyberspace is critical in a modern society and economy."
The online espionage has Google reconsidering its business operations in China and it said it will no longer filter Internet search engine results in that country.
"These attacks and the surveillance they have uncovered -- combined with the attempts over the past year to further limit free speech on the Web -- have led us to conclude that we should review the feasibility of our business operations in China," Google chief legal officer David Drummond said in a blog post.
"We are no longer willing to continue censoring our results on Google.cn, and so over the next few weeks we will be discussing with the Chinese government the basis on which we could operate an unfiltered search engine within the law, if at all," he said.
Drummond said Google realizes that defying Chinese government demands regarding filtering Internet search engine results may mean having to shut down its operations in China.
Google said it detected in mid-December "a highly sophisticated and targeted attack on our corporate infrastructure originating from China that resulted in the theft of intellectual property from Google."
The company said it was notifying at least 20 other large companies of similar attacks including finance, Internet, media, technology, and chemical firms. Related article: Baidu shares up after Google warning "We have no indication that any of our mail properties have been compromised,"
Today China's largest search engine, Baidu.com, said that it was temporarily shut down after a cyber attack.
Hackers briefly blocked access to China's top search engine by steering traffic to another Web site where a group reportedly calling itself the "Iranian Cyber Army" claimed responsibility.
"Services on Baidu's main websitehttp://www.baidu.comwere interrupted today due to external manipulation of its DNS (domain name server) in the U.S. Baidu has been resolving this issue and the majority of services have been restored," Baidu spokesman Victor Tseng said in a statement.
Foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said at a regular news briefing Tuesday that China "opposes all cyber crimes, including hacking."
There was no evidence the hackers are actually linked to Iran.
Baidu, pronounced "by-doo," holds a market value of about $13 billion and dominates China's Internet search like Google dominates the market in just about every other major country in the world. The research firm Analysys International pegs Baidu's share at about 62 percent of China's internet search market compared to 29 percent for Google.