Google’s Brin Cops to Plan to Reclaim Lost Decade in China

Mozilla, another progressive U.S. internet player, ceded moral high ground to stay in China 

Sergey Brin

Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg
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Google executives admitted for the first time this week that they’re looking to get their search engine up and running in China after a hiatus of almost a decade.

At the company's weekly all-staff meeting, the project was discussed by co-founder Sergey Brin -- the very executive most closely associated with the decision in 2010 to pull out of China. It was a widely lauded move by Google managers, led by Brin, who argued that they'd rather leave than subject their search tool to China's stringent rules that filter out politically sensitive results, such as the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre.