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ArtikelGoogle and its Ordeal in China  
Oleh: Levy, Steven
Jenis: Article from Bulletin/Magazine
Dalam koleksi: Fortune vol. 163 no. 6 (May 2011), page 66-71.
Topik: Web Sites; Search Engines; Market Entry; Success; Business Growth
Fulltext: Google and its Ordeal in China.pdf (47.48KB)
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Isi artikelPlans for Google.cn were well under way by May 7, 2005, when an unexpected e-mail arrived in the in-box of Eric Schmidt. It was from a computer scientist and executive at Microsoft named Kai-Fu Lee. Kai-Fu Lee was a celebrated computer scientist who had become a phenomenon in China. Lee resigned from Microsoft on July 18 and officially accepted Google's offer the next day. It was worth over $13 million, including a $2.5 million signing bonus. On his Chinese-language Web site, Lee said that Google had given him a "shock" by its fresh approach to technology and postulated that in China, his new employer's youth, freedom, transparency, and honesty would produce a miracle. Google.cn went live on Jan 27, 2006. A few months later Google China moved into its new offices. Google had hoped that its decision to create a search engine in the .cn domain would lead to a level playing field.
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