Google eyes Asia growth with new data centres

12 Dec, 2011

Google on December 8 began construction of a new data centre in Hong Kong, the first of three planned for Asia as the Web giant expands to meet the region's growing thirst for information technology. Two other data centres - which usually house computer and telecom systems with high security and backup power supplies - are also planned for Singapore and Taiwan.
Google figures show Asia has the fastest growing number of Internet users in the world. But the US Company faces stiff competition, particularly in China where domestic search engines like Baidu are popular and censorship last year forced it to move its Chinese search engine overseas.
China has the world's largest internet population with 485 million users. A study released by the Economist Intelligence Unit in September said Asian economies are closing the gap on the West in terms of their IT competitiveness, as they strengthen copyright protection and implement regulatory reforms.
The study said the US retained its position as the world's most competitive IT industry, but seven Asian economies made it to the top 20, including Singapore, which ranked third overall, as well as Australia, Taiwan and Japan.

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