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Surveys find a lot more Chinese online

A Chinese woman rides her bike past Google China's headquarters in Beijing on June 30, 2010. China is threatening to revoke Google's China business license over the company's decision to redirect Chinese traffic to computer in Hong Kong that are now governed by the communist government's censorship practices. UPI/Stephen Shaver
A Chinese woman rides her bike past Google China's headquarters in Beijing on June 30, 2010. China is threatening to revoke Google's China business license over the company's decision to redirect Chinese traffic to computer in Hong Kong that are now governed by the communist government's censorship practices. UPI/Stephen Shaver | License Photo

BEIJING, July 21 (UPI) -- The number of Chinese with home Internet access has jumped while the gap between urban and rural Chinese has also grown, Gallup surveys indicate.

Between 2007 and 2009, the number of households that are online grew 9 percent, Gallup reported, with about 90 million people gaining access. By 2009, 42 percent of city-dwellers had home Internet, up 14 percent in a year, while Internet access was still a luxury in the countryside with only 11 percent online.

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Gallup said it expects continued growth in Internet access through computers and mobile devices. One major spur is that access becomes more valuable as more people get online and communicate electronically.

The Gallup Organization has been conducting continuous surveys in China since 2004, interviewing between 3,700 and 3,400 people 15 and older each year. The margin of error for information based on the entire sample is 2.2 percentage points.

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