Google Blocked in 25% of Countries

LOS ANGELES — A new report from Google illustrates the rapid growth of Internet censorship, with the revelation that its products and services have been blocked by 25 percent of the countries in which they are offered.

In a post on Google's official blog, entitled, "Controversial content and free expression on the web: a refresher," Rachel Whetstone, vice president of global communications and public affairs, outlined the company's approach to censoring content on Google services, in response to questions surrounding the search giant's removal of restrictions on Chinese queries through its Google.cn portal.

"Censorship of the web is a growing problem," Whetstone wrote. "According to the Open Net Initiative, the number of governments that censor has grown from about four in 2002 to over 40 today."

Whetstone says that increased Internet censorship is the result of widespread access and the ubiquitous uploading of user-generated content, including activist and other videos, posted to YouTube at a rate of 24 hours of video uploaded every minute.

"This creates big challenges for governments used to controlling traditional print and broadcast media," Whetstone blogged.

"While everyone agrees that there are limits to what information should be available online — for example child pornography," she continued, "many of the new government restrictions we are seeing today not only strike at the heart of an open Internet but also violate Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which states that: 'Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.'"

For its part, Whetstone says, Google deals with controversial content in different ways.

"As a starting point, we distinguish between search (where we are simply linking to other web pages), the content we host, and ads," she explained, saying that search is the least restrictive service, "because search results are a reflection of the content of the web."

Whetstone cited "child pornography, certain links to copyrighted material, spam, malware, and results that contain sensitive personal information like credit card numbers," as being excluded from search results. While a distinction is made between censoring politically sensitive material in non-democratic states such as China, Google does honor the laws of democratically elected European governments, which bar Nazi and other political materials.

"We also comply with youth protection laws in countries like Germany by removing links to certain material that is deemed inappropriate for children or by enabling Safe Search by default, as we do in Korea," Whetstone wrote. "Whenever we do remove content, we display a message for our users that X number of results have been removed to comply with local law and we also report those removals to chillingeffects.org, a project run by the Berkman Center for Internet and Society, which tracks online restrictions on speech."

Google services such as Blogger, YouTube, and Picasa Web Albums are subject to more stringent content policies due to the material being hosted on the company's servers, while its advertising products are the most restrictive in the content that they allow.

According to Whetstone these policies are always evolving, but in the end, they are based upon the principles at the heart of everything the company does.

"We've said them before, but in these particularly challenging times, they bear repeating: We have a bias in favor of people's right to free expression," Whetstone concluded. "We are driven by a belief that more information means more choice, more freedom and ultimately more power for the individual."

Related:  

Copyright © 2026 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More News

SWR Data Publishes 2026 'Hot List' Report

Adult industry market research outfit SWR Data has published its 2026 Hot List report on the top creator platforms of 2025.

Adult Chat Platform Arousr Sets Human-Only Host Policy

Adult chat platform Arousr has announced a policy to only use verified human hosts, not chatbots.

Arizona State Legislator Proposes Porn Ban

A member of Arizona’s House of Representatives on Wednesday introduced a bill that would make it illegal to produce or distribute adult content in that state.

SinfulXAI to Launch New AI Generator

AI companion platform SinfulXAI has announced its new AI video generator, launching in February.

AEBN Publishes Popular Searches for November, December

AEBN has published the top search terms for November and December from its straight and gay theaters in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.

X3 Expo Day 2 Delivers Stars, Screenings and Fan Favorites

The sun once again shone brightly on the historic Hollywood Palladium as throngs of avid fans made their way through the doors, ready to experience Day 2 of the 2026 X3 Expo.

X3 Expo Kicks Into Gear With an All-Star Lineup

Outside the historic Hollywood Palladium on Friday, a huge crowd of fans lined Sunset Boulevard, eagerly awaiting the opening of the 2026 X3 Expo and their big chance to meet the cream of the crop of adult stars.

2026 XBIZ Honors Salutes Resilience Across the Online Adult Industry

The 2026 XBIZ Honors packed house Wednesday night, turning the Kimpton Everly Hotel’s Nichols Ballroom into a gala celebration of industry excellence.

Elevated X Integrates CCBill for Payment Processing

Elevated X has added CCBill payment processing integration to its ELXNexus traffic management and affiliate software.

Florida Congressman Files Latest Bill to Repeal Section 230

Rep. Jimmy Patronis of Florida has become the latest member of Congress to propose legislation that would repeal Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which protects interactive computer services — including adult platforms — from liability for user-generated content.

Show More