Google Search  
Sawf News on mobile
Login
Register

Home
Bollywood
Slideshows
Entertainment
Fashion
Fashion Designers
Gossip
Health and Science
Lifestyle
Tech
Travel
About

Victoria's Secret (2006) : Blend of Sexy and Tartan
Victoria's Secret (2005)
Victoria's Secret (2003)

Designer Swimwear 2009
Ed Hardy Swimwear
Ed Hardy Swimwear by Christian Audigier: Runway photos
Pistol Panties swimwear : Runway photos
Gottex bikini and swimwear : Runway photos
Rosa Cha bikini and swimwear : Runway photos
Ashley Paige bikini and swimwear : Runway photos
Beach Bunny Swimwear : Runway photos
Home > Lifestyle
Previous Next
China to investigate Google for illegal maps: official media
Posted on Tuesday, May 06, 2008 (EST)
China has launched an investigation into online mapping services by Internet giants including Google and Sohu in an effort to protect state secrets and territorial integrity, state press said.
 
Print this page
Email this page

An office worker looks at Google's satellite image service in Hong Kong
© AFP/File Laurent Fievet

BEIJING (AFP) - According to Min Yiren, vice head of the State Bureau of Surveying and Mapping, authorities hope to get rid of online maps that wrongly depict China's borders or that reveal military secrets, the People's Daily said Monday.

The government began the investigation into the problematic maps in April and will continue it until the end of the year, the report said.

Min cited five areas of concern, with the redrawing of China's borders and placing disputed territory outside the nation the top priority, it said.

Such areas of dispute include Taiwan, the Spratlys and Paracels island chains in the South China Sea and the Diaoyu Islands in the East China Sea, it said.

Previous reports, citing Min, said that there were nearly 10,000 illegal map websites in China.

The People's Daily named US Internet giant Google, as well as China's Sohu and Baidu, as being under investigation. The report was seen as the first time the government media had named specific companies as possible offenders.

Eight ministries including the mapping bureau, the Ministry of Industry and Information, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ministry of Public Safety are involved in the investigation, it said.

Last year, China restricted mapping and survey activity by foreign entities for national security reasons.

©AFP

Related Topics:

  • China sticks to Tibet luxury train project
  • Imperial past drives China's Olympic dream
  • Canada, China grab jackpot on new global Monopoly board
  • Olympics put China's most famous foreigner in spotlight
  • Equestrian show jumps reflect China's self-image, say designers
  • Add Your Comment

    Section Headlines
    Celebrity News
    Celebrity Slideshows
    Bollywood Celebrity News