Why China Block Bing Search Engine
What just happened? While China
blocks a number of western websites—Facebook, Twitter, etc.—Microsoft’s Bing
was allowed through the Great Firewall thanks to its censored search results.
But despite kowtowing to the government, the search engine has joined the list
of inaccessible services.
It appears that Bing has been
banned using a DNS corruption—a popular method of blocking websites in China.
It means Chinese nameservers are unable to retrieve the IP address of a URL.
TechCrunch notes that some people have been able to access Bing by typing in
the IP address directly.
“We’ve confirmed that Bing is
currently inaccessible in China and are engaged to determine next steps,” said
Microsoft. According to the Financial Times, state-owned telecoms company China
Unicom confirmed the government ordered the block on Bing.
When Google pulled out of China
in 2010 over censorship and cyberattack concerns, Bing, which censors sensitive
topics such as Tiananmen Square, was left as the only major foreign search
engine that could be accessed in the country.
The reasons behind the ban are
unclear. It follows increased tensions between the US and China, from the
ongoing trade war to the battle with Huawei and the arrest of its CFO.
Google had face controversy over
a possible return to China with a censored version of its search engine, known
internally as Project Dragonfly. But objections from employees and US
politicians led to its reported cancelation last month. It’s said to be still
studying the idea, though the Bing incident may influence Google's decision.
Bing is reported to have
accounted for just 2 percent of the Chinese market, way behind local search
engines Baidu and Sogou, but that’s not to say Microsoft won’t feel aggrieved
by the ban.
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