Google Inc yesterday apologized for using another company's
technology in a Chinese input method product it released a week
ago.
The program, categorized as Input Method Editor Software and
called Guge Pinyin, was found - after its official release on April
4 - to share a lot of similarities with Sougou Pinyin, an input
method product launched by Chinese portal Sohu.com in June last
year.
Google yesterday said it did include "some data source that
doesn't belong to Google in the trial period of the new product"
and "felt sorry for its users and Sohu.com".
But the company also said the product had finished the latest
upgrade yesterday and the current version of the product's
dictionary was based on Google's own database.
Lee Kai-fu, vice-president of Google and president of Google
China, yesterday said: "We will continue to intensify our research
activities in our input method product and keep consummating
product functions and users' experience."
The similarity of Google and Sohu.com's products lies in the
product dictionary, which enables users to write in Chinese
characters by typing in their pinyin equivalents.
Sohu.com had said that Google "stole its dictionary", for it not
only discovered many similarities in the dictionaries of the two
products but also found the same bugs in the two.
The company delivered a letter to Google's Beijing office at the
weekend, giving Google three days to comply with its request to
stop offering download of Google's product, an apology and a
discussion of compensation.
Liu Xinzhi, spokesman of Sohu.com, told China Daily
yesterday that the company is still waiting for an official apology
from Google, and Sohu.com retained its right for any further legal
action.
Yu Guofu, chief lawyer of Sam Partners Law Firm, said it's still
too early to say that Google's new product has violated Sohu.com's
copyright.
"The identification of copyright violation needs a great
scrutiny," said Yu. "It is still hard to say whether Google has
done something wrong."
Some experts said Google's statement yesterday reflected a lack
of confidence, which is unusual for the US Internet giant.
"I think the fault may lie with individual program developers
who were responsible for the product and wanted to finish the job
quickly," said Liu Bin, chief analyst from research house BDA
China.
He said Google did not need to steal somebody else's dictionary
since it would be very easy for the company to establish its own,
based on database supported by the company's powerful search
engine.
(China Daily April 10, 2007)