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Censorship
AbacusCulture

From Bing to Baidu: How people in China search online

Bing goes offline for some Chinese internet users, prompting censorship fears

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From Bing to Baidu: How people in China search online
Karen Chiu
This article originally appeared on ABACUS

Update, January 25, 2019: Microsoft confirms that Bing was inaccessible in China, but service is now restored. 

No matter where you go, Bing seems to be the forgotten search engine -- eclipsed by Google globally, and trailing Baidu in China.

Bing even trails Google in China, which is remarkable because Google is blocked in China -- and Bing has an official presence in the country. Still, even a small share is a lot in a country with more than twice as many internet users as the entire population of the US -- and as trust in Baidu drops, Bing has room to grow.
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“I started using Bing in 2013. That’s because a few years back, reports started to come out questioning how Baidu ranked search results and screened false ads,” said Zhao Zhiyong, a 24-year-old student.

Meet Baidu, China’s homegrown search engine

She’s not the only one choosing Bing over Baidu. In one discussion on the Quora-like Q&A site Zhihu, plenty of people recommended Microsoft’s service as an alternative.
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