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The Internet search giant Google Inc.
has bought a stake in a Chinese software provider as part of the company's
bid to extend its dominance beyond Internet searches to other online
services, The Wall Street Journal reported on Friday. (File
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WASHINGTON, Jan. 5 (Xinhua) -- The Internet search
giant Google Inc. has bought a stake in a Chinese software provider as part of
the company's bid to extend its dominance beyond Internet searches to other
online services, The Wall Street Journal reported on Friday.
A Google spokesman said the
Internet company has made an unspecified investment in Xunlei Network Technology
Co., which provides video and game downloads. The two companies plan to unveil
their partnership during a news conference late Friday, said the report.
Google, the world's largest search-engine provider,
has sought to broaden its Internet presence globally.
In October, the company agreed to buy
online-video-sharing company YouTube Inc., for about 1.8 billion dollars in
stock, a move that could at one stroke make Google a leader in the fast-growing
online-video market, said the report.
Yet Google, based in Mountain View, Calif., has had
some difficulty extending beyond its dominant English-language search site to
sites in other languages around the world, where local competitors are enjoying
linguistic and other home-grown advantages.
In China, the world's second-largest Internet market
after the U.S., Google is second behind rival Baidu.com Inc, according to the
report by the U.S. business daily.