![]() Google Translate was reintroduced to mainland China in 2017 following speculation that it was set to make a return. The move came soon after Google stopped censoring its services in the country, defying the government. A massive cyberattack combined with the copious government censorship internet users must contend with prompted the US firm to pull its search engine from China in 2010, just four years after officially entering the market. ![]() Google has had a complex relationship with China over the years. But according to web analytics platform Similarweb (via the South China Morning Post), the Chinese Google Translate website recorded 53.5 million visits from desktop and mobile users combined in August. "We are discontinuing Google Translate in mainland China due to low usage," Google said in a statement. The country's dedicated website for Google Translate now redirects visitors to the Hong Kong version, which isn't accessible from mainland China. What just happened? One of the few remain Google services still available in mainland China, Google Translate, has been discontinued in the Asian nation, allegedly because hardly anyone was using it.
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