<p>Microsoft, which will close its career-oriented social network LinkedIn in China, is one of the few US tech titans that have managed some success in the country.</p>.<p>The software giant has kept its business alive in China largely by complying with strict local laws, despite the communist nation's wide-reaching censorship.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/microsoft-shuts-down-linkedin-in-china-1040684.html" target="_blank">Microsoft shuts down LinkedIn in China</a></strong></p>.<p>Here are some key points about the technology and gaming group's operations in the world's second-biggest economy.</p>.<p>Microsoft arrived in China in 1992 and opened its largest research and development centre outside the United States. It employs around 6,200 people in China.</p>.<p>The Windows operating system is used in the vast majority of computers in China -- despite Beijing promising in recent years to develop its own operating system. The company's success has a downside, however, as its software is widely pirated.</p>.<p>The important Chinese market, which is very restrictive for foreign firms, represents a drop in the ocean of Microsoft's business, accounting for barely 1.8 percent of its turnover, president Brad Smith said at the beginning of last year.</p>.<p>Microsoft's Bing is one of the few foreign search engines operating in China -- although it is far behind local competitors Baidu and Sogou, which dominate the market.</p>.<p>Microsoft founder Bill Gates has long embodied a model of success in the eyes of many Chinese people and his books are bestsellers in the country.</p>.<p>President Xi Jinping visited the company's headquarters on a state visit to the US in 2015, where he met Gates and his wife.</p>.<p>Today, as the head of his humanitarian Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the 65-year-old has the prestige of a head of state in Beijing.</p>.<p>In February 2020, Xi wrote Gates a letter thanking him for his support during the coronavirus epidemic.</p>.<p>China censors all subjects considered politically sensitive in the name of stability, and internet giants are urged to block unwanted content online.</p>.<p>Refusing to comply with Beijing's strict demands, American giants Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube, as well as Wikipedia and several other foreign media, are blocked by China's "great firewall".</p>.<p>It has not been all smooth sailing for the company, with Bing temporarily taken offline in 2019 -- prompting speculation the search engine had been blocked by censors.</p>.<p>Microsoft operated its professional LinkedIn network in the country for years by complying with censorship rules through a local joint venture.</p>.<p>But on Thursday it announced it would close LinkedIn in China, citing an increasingly "challenging operating environment and greater compliance requirements".</p>.<p>In March the group already said it had halted new member sign-ups while reviewing compliance with local laws.</p>.<p>LinkedIn has been criticised in the country for pulling the professional accounts of dissidents -- which it later said was in error -- and scratching politically sensitive content from its pages.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/microsoft-partner-tech-avant-garde-seeks-to-raise-rs-300-crore-to-create-digital-classrooms-in-india-1040269.html" target="_blank">Microsoft partner Tech Avant-Garde seeks to raise Rs 300 crore to create digital classrooms in India</a></strong></p>.<p>Skype and Teams -- Microsoft's two other big platforms -- remain available.</p>.<p>In 2000 Beijing halted the sale of all games consoles because of their alleged negative effects on the "mental health" of young users, although they remained available illegally.</p>.<p>After the ban was lifted, Microsoft in 2014 was the first foreign firm to break into the video games market in China with its Xbox One console.</p>.<p>Also in 2014, the Chinese competition authorities opened an anti-monopoly investigation against Microsoft and its Windows software.</p>.<p>Around 100 inspectors raided the group's offices in four Chinese cities, confiscating files and questioning employees.</p>.<p><strong>Check out latest DH videos here:</strong></p>
<p>Microsoft, which will close its career-oriented social network LinkedIn in China, is one of the few US tech titans that have managed some success in the country.</p>.<p>The software giant has kept its business alive in China largely by complying with strict local laws, despite the communist nation's wide-reaching censorship.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/microsoft-shuts-down-linkedin-in-china-1040684.html" target="_blank">Microsoft shuts down LinkedIn in China</a></strong></p>.<p>Here are some key points about the technology and gaming group's operations in the world's second-biggest economy.</p>.<p>Microsoft arrived in China in 1992 and opened its largest research and development centre outside the United States. It employs around 6,200 people in China.</p>.<p>The Windows operating system is used in the vast majority of computers in China -- despite Beijing promising in recent years to develop its own operating system. The company's success has a downside, however, as its software is widely pirated.</p>.<p>The important Chinese market, which is very restrictive for foreign firms, represents a drop in the ocean of Microsoft's business, accounting for barely 1.8 percent of its turnover, president Brad Smith said at the beginning of last year.</p>.<p>Microsoft's Bing is one of the few foreign search engines operating in China -- although it is far behind local competitors Baidu and Sogou, which dominate the market.</p>.<p>Microsoft founder Bill Gates has long embodied a model of success in the eyes of many Chinese people and his books are bestsellers in the country.</p>.<p>President Xi Jinping visited the company's headquarters on a state visit to the US in 2015, where he met Gates and his wife.</p>.<p>Today, as the head of his humanitarian Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the 65-year-old has the prestige of a head of state in Beijing.</p>.<p>In February 2020, Xi wrote Gates a letter thanking him for his support during the coronavirus epidemic.</p>.<p>China censors all subjects considered politically sensitive in the name of stability, and internet giants are urged to block unwanted content online.</p>.<p>Refusing to comply with Beijing's strict demands, American giants Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube, as well as Wikipedia and several other foreign media, are blocked by China's "great firewall".</p>.<p>It has not been all smooth sailing for the company, with Bing temporarily taken offline in 2019 -- prompting speculation the search engine had been blocked by censors.</p>.<p>Microsoft operated its professional LinkedIn network in the country for years by complying with censorship rules through a local joint venture.</p>.<p>But on Thursday it announced it would close LinkedIn in China, citing an increasingly "challenging operating environment and greater compliance requirements".</p>.<p>In March the group already said it had halted new member sign-ups while reviewing compliance with local laws.</p>.<p>LinkedIn has been criticised in the country for pulling the professional accounts of dissidents -- which it later said was in error -- and scratching politically sensitive content from its pages.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/microsoft-partner-tech-avant-garde-seeks-to-raise-rs-300-crore-to-create-digital-classrooms-in-india-1040269.html" target="_blank">Microsoft partner Tech Avant-Garde seeks to raise Rs 300 crore to create digital classrooms in India</a></strong></p>.<p>Skype and Teams -- Microsoft's two other big platforms -- remain available.</p>.<p>In 2000 Beijing halted the sale of all games consoles because of their alleged negative effects on the "mental health" of young users, although they remained available illegally.</p>.<p>After the ban was lifted, Microsoft in 2014 was the first foreign firm to break into the video games market in China with its Xbox One console.</p>.<p>Also in 2014, the Chinese competition authorities opened an anti-monopoly investigation against Microsoft and its Windows software.</p>.<p>Around 100 inspectors raided the group's offices in four Chinese cities, confiscating files and questioning employees.</p>.<p><strong>Check out latest DH videos here:</strong></p>