Google China closing

 

 

Following cyber-attacks identified as Chinese’s on private information figuring on Google.cn and 20 other major IT, media, finance and technology companies, Google has published on its official blog an official announcement :

 

“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. We recognize that this may well mean having to shut down Google.cn, and potentially our offices in China.”

 

So, what are the consequences if Google was to shut down Google.cn :

 

x Business : Baidu will gain most marketshares coming from publisher’s paid search programs as well as Bing and other less significant homegrown search engines. Google owned about 36% of search engines market share in China in 2009 4th quarter.

 

x Ethics : Google would gain more credibility in the West after it was critized for “adjusting” to Chinese local market requirements, i.e. sourcing censored search results

 

But honestly, is this alleged attack the real kick for this major decision and is this a smart move ? If Google was making more bucks in China would it leave? Now that the market doesn’t look like a promised land anymore, ethics, on which Google had closed eyes before, are invoked to justify a possible departure – perhaps not to “lose face”.

I understand the commercial decision, as well as the good intentions of some people towards the censorship issue. But strategically, this looks like a big step. Backwards. What do you think?

To find out more (and see how this will affect your SEO in China) check the links from SEO company Them.Pro and the official Google blog.

To be followed…

 

 

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A very interesting article on THEM.pro shows how the domain name extension impact SEO.

 

Reminder : a domain name extension is what comes after your domain name, such as .com, .net, .org. National and international extensions are for instance .cn for China or .fr for France, .uk for UK…

 

The test ran over several websites using the same domain name but different domain name extensions. 

The rankings results on Google, Bing and Baidu showed national domain extensions have “a very strong impact on the rankings of websites in the designated country” says THEM.

 

Basically, the domain name extension weighs more when it comes to ranking on national search engines than the language used on the website or even the IP location of the hosting server.

 

So, if I wanted to be ranked better in Chinese search engines, I would have to be BuzzandtheCity.cn. Turns out, I don’t.

 

What about your website?

 

For SEO tips and full article click here