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The communist government promotes Internet use for education and business but tries to block material deemed subversive or pornographic. It has temporarily blocked access to Google in the past after accusing it of spreading sexually explicit material. Google opened its China site in 2006 to attract more Chinese users after the government filters slowed their access to its main U.S. site. In a letter requesting Google's license renewal, the company's local partner, Guxiang Information Technology Co. Ltd., pledged to "abide by the Chinese law" and "provide no law-breaking contents," Xinhua reported. Also Thursday, a state-run newspaper said Google is not on the first list of companies the government plans to approve to provide online mapping services.
Twenty-three domestic companies including Baidu, portal Sohu Inc. and e-commerce site Alibaba are among those expected to be approved, the China Daily said, citing the State Bureau of Surveying and Mapping. Asked for comment on Google's situation, a U.S. State Department spokesman, P.J. Crowley, said Wednesday in Washington, "I think there are negotiations ongoing, and these are a matter between China and Google." ___ Online: Google China site (in Chinese):
http://www.google.cn/
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