Tech Brief: Google is Plotting a Return to China After 8 Years (Updated)

More than eight years after Google pulled out of China over its troubling censorship issues, the search behemoth is planning to reenter the market, The Intercept reports, citing internal documents leaked by a whistleblower. The project, supposedly codenamed Dragonfly, has been in development since last spring, and will involve an Android app that "will blacklist websites and search terms about human rights, democracy, religion, and peaceful protest."


The move, if true, marks a giant volte face for the company after it decided it was no longer comfortable with censoring search results back in January 2010. Since then though a lot has changed, with China emerging a huge smartphone market that remains untapped for a lot of companies like Google, Facebook and Twitter, with the notable exception of Apple.

Which also explains Google's recent attempts at reconciliation: a new AI-focussed research centre that was opened late last year, the release of Files Go and a doodle mini-app for WeChat, the strategic partnership with Chinese retailer JD.com, in addition to the re-introduction of Google Translate in the country.

Here is a quick timeline of events:

Aug. 1: The Intercept reports that Google is working a new project, supposedly codenamed Dragonfly, that has been in development since last spring, citing internal documents leaked by a whistleblower. The secret project is said to involve an Android app that "will blacklist websites and search terms about human rights, democracy, religion, and peaceful protest."

Aug. 2: The Information (paywall) reports that Google is also developing a news app exclusive to China that will comply with local censorship laws.

Aug. 3: Google is also looking at partnering with local cloud service providers (including Tencent Holdings) to bring Google Drive and Google Docs to China, Bloomberg reports, in a move that sounds a lot similar to Apple, which recently migrated all of its Chinese users' iCloud data to a local operator named GCBD in order to comply with local regulations.

Aug. 7: People's Daily, China's ruling Communist Party mouthpiece, responds to Google's plans for a censored search engine, saying it's welcome back to mainland China as long as it complies with the necessary laws. "Google is welcome to return to the mainland, but it's a prerequisite that it must comply with the requirements of the law," reads the commentary, in addition to stating that the tech giant's decision to exit the country was a "huge blunder which resulted in the company missing golden chances in the mainland’s internet development."

Aug. 16: In the wake of internal backlash against Google's supposed entry into China, CEO Sundar Pichai informs employees that the moves being undertaken are just "exploratory" and that the company isn't close to launching a search product in the country.

Sept. 14: Google is also reportedly building a prototype system that would tie Chinese users' Google searches to their personal phone numbers so as to meet local censorship requirements, reports The Intercept, drawing further opposition inside and outside the company over its controversial decision to re-enter the country.

Sept. 26: At a Senate hearing on data privacy, Google's chief privacy officer Keith Enright confirms the existence of Project Dragonfly, but dodges questions on what exactly the project entails, stating "I am not clear on the contours of what is in scope or out of scope for that project." Ben Gomes, Google's head of search, tells the BBC that "Right now all we've done is some exploration, but since we don't have any plans to launch something there's nothing much I can say about it."

Oct. 4: The U.S. government urges Google to halt work on Project Dragonfly, and in general any business practice that would abet Beijing's oppression, reports The Wall Street Journal.

Oct. 11: Google's China-specific search engine may be launched in the next six to nine months, contradicting earlier reports that the company's plans were still in the exploratory phase, according to a leaked transcript of an internal meeting that occurred on July 18, via The Intercept. An anonymous Google source calls Ben Gomes' earlier comments (refer to update on Sept. 26) "bullshit," while Gomes has the following response when reached via cellphone: "I can't hear anything that you are saying, I can just hear that you are talking," before hanging up.

Oct. 15: Google CEO Sundar Pichai officially confirms company's plans for a China-focussed search engine, adding internal tests have been very promising and that the country is important given "how important the market is and how many users there are". "It turns out we'll be able to serve well over 99 percent of the queries," he said, stating that, "People don't understand fully, but you're always balancing a set of values (providing access to information, freedom of expression, and user privacy) … but we also follow the rule of law in every country." Google's Project Dragonfly and Project Maven (a Department of Defense project to build AI and facial recognition technology for drone warfare) have been both controversial, with employees and the larger tech community seeing the company's actions as crossing an ethical line.

Nov. 21: Alphabet chairman John Hennessy underscores the struggle with launching a search engine in China. "The question that I think comes to my mind then, that I struggle with, is are we better off giving Chinese citizens a decent search engine, a capable search engine even if it is restricted and censored in some cases, than a search engine that's not very good? And does that improve the quality of their lives?," Hennessy tells in an interview with Bloomberg, adding, "Anybody who does business in China compromises some of their core values."

Nov. 27: A growing group of Google employees (now more than 600) sign a letter (Google Employees Against Dragonfly) urging the search giant to end the "Dragonfly" project aimed at creating a censored version of its search engine in China. "Many of us accepted employment at Google with the company's values in mind, including its previous position on Chinese censorship and surveillance, and an understanding that Google was a company willing to place its values above its profits. After a year of disappointments including Project Maven, Dragonfly, and Google's support for abusers, we no longer believe this is the case. This is why we're taking a stand," reads the letter.

Nov. 29: Key executives involved in Project Dragonfly, including Google's China head Scott Beaumont, were dismissive of surveillance and security concerns arising out of launching a search engine that could associate users' phone numbers (and their location) with searches seeking "information banned by the government," reports The Intercept, adding, not only was Sergey Brin kept in the dark, they "shut out members of the company's security and privacy team from key meetings about the search engine, the four people said, and tried to sideline a privacy review of the plan that sought to address potential human rights abuses."

Liz Fong-Jones, a Google worker and employee advocate, responds on Twitter saying "I firmly suggest that my current fellow colleagues think about what they'd do if the red line were crossed and an executive overrode a S&P (Security and Privacy) launch bit, or members of the S&P team indicated that they were coerced into marking it green. Google's S&P teams must have our backs." Fellow Googlers, including herself, pledge more than US$ 200,000 towards a strike fund, calling for mass resignations if Project Dragonfly gets shipped without signoff from Security and Privacy teams.

Nov. 30: New internet regulation rules go into effect in China, mandating any online internet service provider (like Tencent, Alibaba etc.) to start capturing activities of users posting in blogs, microblogs, chat rooms, video platforms and webcasts, including call logs, chat logs, times of activity and network addresses, citing a "need to safeguard national security and social order."

Dec. 1: Jack Poulson, research scientist at Google who quit the company after internal fights arguing for more clarification on Project Dragonfly, pens his side of the story on The Intercept, narrating the sequence of events that led to him coming public with his resignation. "I, for my part, would ask that Sundar Pichai honestly engage on what the chair of Google's parent company has agreed is a compromise of some of Google's 'core values.' Google's AI principles have committed the company to not 'design or deploy [...] technologies whose purpose contravenes widely accepted principles of … human rights.'"

Dec. 10: Privacy advocate and NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, along with various human rights groups including Amnesty International, sign an open letter urging Google to drop its plans to re-enter China.

Dec. 11: Google CEO Sundar Pichai, in a testimony to U.S. Congress, once again reiterates that Project Dragonfly is an internal effort and that "right now there are no plans for us to launch a search product in China," while pointing out Google's "mission" of making information digitally accessible.

Dec. 17: The Intercept reports that Google has halted work on a data collection/analysis project that sourced data from 265.com, a Chinese web directory service that Google purchased in 2008, to gather "data about the kinds of things that people located in mainland China routinely search for in Mandarin," in turn helping them a prototype of Dragonfly.

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