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SHANGHAI - Facebook, the social networking internet site that is sweeping the globe with a quarter million new members every day, has targeted the world's second-largest internet market, registering a local web address in China.
Facebook has yet to say when it might offer a local-language service for the China market, but it already boasts more than 100,000 members in its English-language China network as well as alumni groups for the country's top universities, including Peking University and Fudan University.
The move also appears to be aimed at warding off the potential copyright tussles that have dogged Google in the fast-growing market.
Facebook.cn is registered by U.S.-based Facebook Inc, according to search results on the government-backed China internet Network Information Centre website .
The domain name facebook.com.cn, meanwhile, has been registered - to an individual working at a local internet service provider - but the web address redirects to Facebook's main page when entered into a browser.
The ".cn" suffix is commonly used for Chinese domain names. A message left on Facebook's media enquiries voicemail went unanswered.
Founded in 2004 by Harvard student Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook has nearly 50 million users and registers 250,000 new users a day, 60 per cent of whom come from outside the United States. Last week, Facebook secured a $US240 million investment from Microsoft Corp, for a 1.6 per cent stake, that values it at $15 billion.
Social networking sites - which let members look up friends' web pages, share photos and videos - are flourishing in China, home to more than 162 million internet users and second in size only to the United States.
Foreign venture capital firms have poured money into local social networking companies, and overseas players, including Rupert Murdoch's News Corp, have also set up their own services targeting Chinese internet surfers.
But Google, fighting to consolidate its trademark globally, has come up against gmail.cn, which has been registered by a firm called ISM Technologies.
A legal source told Reuters earlier this year that ISM is refusing to sell the domain name to the Web search giant.
The name closely resembles Google's internationally known email service, www.gmail.com, and the colours in which the two logos are written are similar.
- REUTERS