Google and all of its major services were blocked in China on
Friday, as the Communist Party meets to appoint new leaders for the
first time in a decade.
Google's own "transparency
report" - designed to detect and publicize service disruptions - shows a
sharp drop in traffic from China across all of Google's products. The
company added the incident to its timeline of outages. "We've checked
and there's nothing wrong on our end," a
Google representative told CNNMoney.
The
cause of the outage is unclear, but it comes just one day after the
start of the Communist Party's 18th National Congress in China. The
once-every-decade meeting is held to select a new stable of leaders.
"The
fact that Google is blocked now is surely no coincidence," the site
GreatFire, which collects data related to what it calls "the great
firewall of China," posted on Friday. "The big question is whether it
will be unblocked again once the congress is over."
GreatFire tracks "blocked web sites and searches," focusing especially on Google and popular Chinese search engine
Baidu (BIDU).
The site said many Google subdomains on Friday were "DNS poisoned" - an
attack method that redirects visitors to an alternate or non-existent
website - and that most attempts to circumvent the block did not work.
Attempts
in China to reach Google.com appear to be redirecting to a
non-functioning IP address in Korea, according to GreatFire. "Never
before have so many people been affected by a decision to block a
website," GreatFire said.
The relationship
between Google and China has never been smooth, as the search engine's
mission "to organize the world's information and make it universally
accessible" flies directly in the face of the country's restrictive
government.
In January 2010, Google threatened to shut
down its Chinese search site at Google.cn, citing censorship rules and
the discovery of a targeted cyber attack on its network infrastructure.
Two months later, the company said it would stop censoring searches on
google.cn and automatically redirect Chinese users to its uncensored
Hong Kong site.
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