The tech giant has been
asked to open a representative office and coordinate with Vietnamese
authorities.
Prime Minister Nguyen
Xuan Phuc has asked that Google open a representative office in
Vietnam to better manage its increasingly popular services in
Vietnam, including preventing bad content on YouTube, according to a report on
the government's website.
Phuc said during a
meeting with Eric Schmidt, executive chairman of Google’s parent company
Alphabet, in Hanoi on Friday that many of Google’s services are widely used by
Vietnamese businesses and people.
He reportedly asked for
more cooperation from Google to prevent and remove bad information on its video
site YouTube.
According to the report,
Schmidt has pledged to work with Vietnam government to filter its content, and
said he will consider opening the Vietnam office.
Vietnam has the second
largest number of YouTube users in the world, he was quoted as saying.
Major market
Nearly 49 million people
in Vietnam, or more than half of the country’s population, are online.
A report from Think With
Google, the research arm of the tech giant, last month said many Vietnamese
spend their summer on searching on Google and watching YouTube.
Trailers on the site got
more than 500 million views in summer 2016, up a staggering 136 percent from
previous year.
Data from the company
shows that last summer, YouTube views in Vietnam doubled compared to spring,
with more than 60 percent from mobile.
Every day during that
summer, 100 million mobile searches were made on Google – that’s even more than
the population.
Toxic’ content
In March, Google Europe
had to apologize for allowing ads to appear alongside offensive videos on
YouTube, after big companies either pulled ads or threatened to do so.
A month later, Vietnam’s
government called on all companies doing business in the country to stop
advertising on YouTube, Facebook and other social media until they could find a
way to end the publication of “toxic” anti-government information.
The information ministry
in April confirmed that it had asked Google to block and remove 2,200 videos on
YouTube that had “defamatory” content against Vietnamese leaders.
Facebook, the most
popular social network in Vietnam, last month also
pledged to cooperate with the Vietnamese government to block "bad"
and "toxic" content.
Google CEO Sundar Pichai
visited Vietnam in December 2015, joining a talk with Vietnamese businesspeople
and startup community.
Source: E.vnexpress
0 nhận xét:
Đăng nhận xét