Google CEO says China search engine would serve 99 percent of queries, takes a swipe at Baidu โ SCMP
What happened: Google CEO Sundar Pichai publicly addressed the companyโs plan to re-enter China with search and news products for the first time. Speaking at Wiredโs 25th-anniversary summit in San Francisco, Pichai said that the company would be able to service 99 percent of all queries. He said China is an important market for the search giant given its size and took a swipe at Baidu by saying Google could compete with local players.
Why itโs important: Project Dragonfly, the codename for the proposed filtered version of Googleโs search engine specifically engineered for use in China, has caused protests both inside and outside the company. Google tried to suppress an internal memo written by an employee that detailed how some aspects of the service would work. Google now seems to be framing the move as an opportunity for information sharing, with Pichai telling US lawmakers that it โwould have broad benefits inside and outside China.โ However, the extent of what is being shared is the problemโthe search engine reportedly requires users to log in to perform searches, keeps track of their location, and then relays the data to a local party with โunilateralโ access to it.
