Google Inc. is to hold talks with the Chinese government about its plans to offer unfiltered search results on its Chinese site, after making an official announcement last week that it may exit China amid worsening censorship, according to reports.
Google has claimed it had been hit by cyber attacks from China majorly aimed at accessing the Gmail accounts of Chinese human right activists, revealing that the company may take the exit route from its China offices as a result.
The Mountain View, California, based company is expected to hold meetings with Chinese authorities sometime in the coming days, Bloomberg News reported Monday, which cited an emailed statement by the company.
Google is still on with its investigation in order to scan its internal networks since the mid-December cyber attacks which caused the theft of intellectual property, and claimed that it had yet not made any decision on whether to close its offices in China, according to a Reuters report Monday.
Last week, China's foreign ministry reacted to Google's move by pointing that the Chinese Internet was open and that foreign Internet companies were highly welcomed for business in China in accordance to the law.












