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By Lucy Hornby Lucy Hornby Thu Oct 21, 9:39 pm ET
BEIJING (Reuters) A Chinese government body has released its own online
mapping service, designed to compete with Google Earth's popular satellite
mapping service, that could spell more trouble for Google's services in the
mainland.
Google and China have been at odds since last year, when a serious hacking
attack originating from China prompted Google to ultimately withdraw its search
service from the mainland.
"Map World" was unveiled by the State Bureau of Surveying and Mapping on
Thursday, and can be accessed via www.tianditu.cn. The home page features an
expansive view of the Great Wall of China, capped by clouds in the shape of the
continents.
Google had not applied for a Web mapping license in China, the English-language
paper said, but Google's mapping service is accessible from computers on the
mainland.
Regulations issued by the bureau in May required companies providing online map
and location services to apply for a license. In order to apply, firms would
have to keep map servers storing data within the country.
Google said at the time that it was studying the new rules, which gives China
the right to shut down providers that fail to qualify for a license.
Google's video-sharing site YouTube and photo service Picasa are both blocked
in China, and its Google docs application is sometimes difficult to access.
Searches originating in China are now directed to its search engine based in
Hong Kong.
Google does not keep servers in mainland China.
At least some of Map World's high-resolution images of central Beijing appear
to have been taken on Oct 1, 2009, when streets were cleared for the tanks and
floats of the National Day Parade, which are visible on the street.
Map World only provides high-altitude images outside China, with the other side
of the Chinese-North Korean border a stark white blank once a certain
resolution is passed. Other countries also turn up a blank page at close
resolution.
Taiwan, which China claims as a renegade province, cannot be viewed at the same
resolution as the mainland.
Much mapping in China is still subject to state-secrecy restrictions, creating
headaches for mining companies unable to source high-resolution deposit maps,
and even for hikers.
(Editing by Ken Wills)