Sundar Pichai says that Project Dragonfly is no closer to release.
Google CEO Sundar Pichai has said that the company's work to develop a search engine for the Chinese market was an "experiment".
Speaking recently, Pichai implied that the work, codenamed Project Dragonfly, was not to be released into the public domain, contradicting recent reports that said the platform was on the road to release.
China has one of the strictest online censorship programs in the world, with Google, Facebook, and Amazon among the sites banned by the so-called "Great Firewall".
Google shut down its own search engine in China back in 2010 following government restrictions, with users having to use a VPN to gain access.
Project Dragonfly delay
This included employees from Google's parent company Alphabet publishing an open letter criticizing Google for its work. The letter claimed that many employees didn't even know that they were involved in building a Chinese search engine, as much of the work was done in fragments.
The workers demanded a seat at the table and stated that building a search engine that would undermine human rights would go against company policy.
Along with a search engine Google was also reportedly looking into developing an Android app with two different versions called Maotai and Longfei, which could launch within nine months after receiving Chinese government approval - however, these have also not surfaced.
SOURCE TechRadar:
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