Google Stands Ground on Google.cn 331
nmccart writes "Google gave testimony on Friday to the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on International Relations. They discussed their decision to build google.cn in China. Elliot Schrage, the vice president for global communications and public affairs at Google describes how these China-based servers fit in to Google's mantra of 'Don't be evil.' Google hopes to use this as an opportunity to help bring global censorship into the spotlight of American politics. Will it work?"
Google.cn (Score:2, Interesting)
"At the outset, I want to acknowledge what I hope is obvious:
Figuring out how to deal with China has been a difficult exercise for Google."
And then 5 or 6 pages of his saying that Google capitulated to Chinese demands.
Do no evil, indeed
The most telling admission (Score:2, Insightful)
In other words, they know that they have completely sold out their basic values. The rest is just pages of rationalization.
Re:The most telling admission (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:The most telling admission (Score:3, Informative)
Uh, Tiananmen Square? Remember?
Re:The most telling admission (Score:3, Informative)
In erasing it from the collective memory of the Chinese. Compare American Google [google.com] with Chinese Google [google.cn]. Echos of 1984 indeed.
Re:The most telling admission (Score:5, Insightful)
I really dislike Google's stance, but I really hate the self-righteousness of the government (and by proxy, the people, of this country). We have decided that corporations need to stand on their principles and "take one for the team", in order to further American values. The people/government expect companies to "do the right thing" and protect our Bill of Rights abroad on philosophical grounds. Except it's not the private industries job to do that, that's the governments job, and the government has done nothing, ever, to discourage China from being the way they are. They are most-favored-nation, etc. They get a few strong words every year, and otherwise get yielded too constantly.
In other words, to Congress I say, put your god damm money where your mouth is. Take a stand yourself before you start demanding that others do it for you. This is just complete and total scapegoating. Why is this country looking to Google to lead the way on spreading free speech? When did we decide that the spread of the basic freedoms should be privitized?
Re:The most telling admission (Score:3, Interesting)
The fact still remains that anytime an America-based company does business overseas the government will be involved. If, when the overseas, America-based company acts contrary to the laws of America, the government should and will get involved.
Just because you don't observe the US government trying to make change in China doesn't mean it isn't tring to do just that. I would expect an internal, covert change like that would be classified to a very high level.
Private industry is made up of "the peopl
Re:The most telling admission (Score:3, Interesting)
Personally I would love to see our companies espouse our cultural values throughout the world, but I think there are some issues with this idea of holding a company accountable to uphold "American Ideals."
Private industry is made up of "the people of this country." So in actuality one should not distiguish the two.
Isn't it then fair to say that the government shouldn't tell "people" how to manage their business? If Google were breaking the law, then you would have a valid point, but I don't know of any
Re:The most telling admission (Score:3)
I agree to an extent. But there are a multitude of cases where the government has to exert some control. For example, if a law exists that states that a certain cryptographic program cannot be exported to foreign countries due to national security concerns (or due to other compelling interests) then companies with file servers should not make it available for download to foreign countries. How they pre
Re:The most telling admission (Score:2)
If you're talking about this being a moral or ethical duty, then surely it's every American citizen's job to do this?
Re:The most telling admission (Score:5, Insightful)
So what should the government do? Even if our economy wasn't dependent upon cheap Chinese imports, what good would isolating China do? We've isolated and punished Cuba with trade restrictions for years, but Cuba isn't any freer. Castro has probably been in power longer than any other leader in the Western Hemisphere, if not the world. Given that trade restrictions have failed to achieve freedom in Cuba, why would they do any good in China? Punitive actions would allow the U.S. to act principled, but it's unlikely they'd do any real good, and it might just strengthen the Chinese' government's grip over its people by delaying the rise of a strong middle class. So the U.S. Government is left in the same position as Google- it's evil to engage China, it's evil not to engage China.
People are being a bit hasty in expecting things to change in China. Freedom takes time. A functional Jeffersonian democracy is a hell of a lot more than the absence of a totalitarian state. It requires security, infrastructure, a market economy, the rule of law, a tradition of people taking charge of their own government. All that takes time. The slow change towards a freer China is frustrating, but the alternative- say, a sudden collapse of the state, as seen in Russia- is probably worse. There, the economy collapsed, the oligarchs ran off with everything, and organized crime filled the power vacuum left by the absence of the state. So for all these people agitating for freedom in China, what do you plan to replace it with? Do you naively expect China to become a model democracy overnight, as we blindly expected to happen in Iraq?
At any rate, China is changing. I met a Chinese student in a course of mine who was studying engineering; she said her goal in life was to get a good education here so she could go live in Shanghai, get a high-paying job, and buy lots of pretty clothes. Which speaks volumes. China is only communist by name, they are a totalitarian country with a market economy: a fascist state. As the Economist notes, however, that's a hopeful sign. Fascist states like Spain and Chile have good histories of making the transition to democracy, but it doesn't happen overnight.
Re:The most telling admission (Score:3, Informative)
"Our search results were being filtered; our service was being crippled; our users were flocking to local Chinese alternatives; and, ultimately, Chinese Internet users had less access to information than they would have had."
"we decided to try a different path, a path rooted in the very pragmatic calculation that we could provide more access to more info
This is fine if... (Score:2)
I'm hoping Google is toeing up to the line simply to get in the door, and then they'll push the envelope every chance they get once the Chinese government realizes the people are as hooked on it as Americans are.
Now that would ultimately be a non-evil strategy. Of course,
Re:The most telling admission (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Google.cn (Score:5, Insightful)
+ Chinese Language Google.com continues to be available in China, unfiltered by Google.
+ Chinese ISPs do filter this and make it painful to use, but that is definitely beyond Google's control.
+ Offering Google.cn only increases information availability and Google clearly marks when results are censored.
If doing business with China is truly evil, then let's hear about your personal pledge to boycott Chinese goods, electronics, clothing. Or is hypocrisy only a problem for others?
"But they said they won't be evil." Give me a break. If doing business with China is evil (and it's not unreasonable to take that stance, if you're consistent), I'd much rather have a company that _tries_ to do the right thing and succeeds 90% of the time than one that never tries at all.
Re:Google.cn (Score:2, Informative)
- Chinese users cannot use proxies to access google.com because the proxies are blocked, as well as many proxy sites.
Re:Google.cn (Score:3, Informative)
There are other ways of offering proxies that people are working on. There is no perfect solution thus far.
Re:Google.cn (Score:2)
+ Google will not host any services that store personal information--such as GMail or Blogger--within China. In other words, they can't be forced to give up information to the government that they don't keep within the borders.
To all you naysayers: Business has to make a profit. That's the way our economy works. You can grumble about that, but nothing you do is going to change it. To complain about a business being a business is disingenuous; a business has no choice but to make a profit if it's g
Snopes.cn debunks claims of censorship in China (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Google.cn (Score:5, Insightful)
Change in China will eventually come, but it will come quicker if outside entities exploit every means of access to the Chinese that is available. That way future generations of Chinese leaders are more likely to be exposed to ideas such as freedom of information and the like.
You might not like the decision Goggle made, but it is grossly unfair to call it evil. Hmm, perhaps the real problem here is that Goggle clearly is trying to use a Utilitarian ethic, and this upsets people who don't like that moral system. The objectors do seem to prefer hard and uncompromising moral rules, rather than ones that bend and flex to fit the situation.
Anyhow Google isn't being evil, they are just trying to do the most good for the Chinese citizens as they can (as far as information access goes). It required that they do something a bit unsavory, but I for one agree that it is better than the alternatives they had to choose from. It isn't like they were giving them the Google searches we enjoy before; the Chinese Government was already interfering and wrecking that service.
-Drachasor
google and China (Score:4, Insightful)
That's right (Score:5, Insightful)
The logical flaw there is question-begging. The point is, they get to choose the countries they're in, and China need not be one of them.
It's really an age-old question: do you shun the evildoers so that they don't influence you, or do you go out and mingle with the evildoers so that you can be a positive influence?
Google appears to be saying that since content filters are not as good as their search engiine, they can be a more positive influence on the culture in China than cooperating with the Chinese harms them.
And there's money there.
Re:That's right (Score:2)
And:
Huh? (Score:2)
[...straw men...]
"Evil" for countries is not the same as "evil" for individuals. The rules for conduct among nations, and even between a government and the governed, are different. People often label governmental action "evil" or "good" when the motivations and results of a given governmental action are much more complex than that.
For example
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually, I do personally boycott [slashdot.org] China.
The reason I labeled your arguments straw was that you set up them up to knock them down. You tried to present a false dichotomy between either boycotting evil completely or embracing it totally. It's not that simple, and so your arguments blow away in the slightest puff of air.
And I never said I agreed with Google, just that I think I understand their position. It's a reasonable one for them to take. World domination is incomplete without owning China.
Something? (Score:3, Insightful)
No it isn't. It's idiotic! You have to almost completely drop out of the economy to avoid Chinese products, you aren't helping the Chinese by doing so, and completely outside of all that the Chinese are busy buying up our dollars to keep our debt propped up, so you're in the game one way or another.
I will be visiting China later this year and I'm very curious about what, if any, attempt will be made to keep various things out of my sight, but
Re: (Score:2)
Re:google and China (Score:2)
You don't see the contradiction there? Let me point it out for you. You claim Google didn't have to do what they did. Then you state that "they need us as badly as we need them."
A large company from *any* country will have trouble ignoring 1.whatever billion customers. And if you ignore them, but y
Re:google and China (Score:2)
Nevertheless, they were motivated by the same thing that motivates every other corporation, "evil" or not: Greed. They are in China - and playing ball with the government there - because they want a part of that market to maximize future returns for their shareholders.
Regarding censorship - there are ways around the GFC and people benefit from even the censored version of Google compared to nothing at all.
Actually, Google will make it easier
Re:google and China (Score:2)
Oh. My. God! Does anybody else know about this? I mean, this should hit the front page of every newspaper in the country!
Picture is worth 1k words (Score:5, Insightful)
http://images.google.cn/images?hl=zh-CN&q=tiananm
Re:Picture is worth 1k words (Score:5, Interesting)
However it's interesting to note that something censored in the US [google.com] is censored all [google.co.uk] over [google.cn] the world [google.nl]
Not comparing what's been censored. Just where.
Re:Picture is worth 1k words (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Picture is worth 1k words (Score:5, Informative)
The complaint was made by kazaa, not about kazaa.
Scroll to the bottom of the page & you see:
Re:Picture is worth 1k words (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Picture is worth 1k words (Score:2)
Re:Picture is worth 1k words (Score:2)
In response to a complaint we received under the US Digital Millennium Copyright Act, we have removed 1 result(s) from this page. If you wish, you may read the DMCA complaint that caused the removal(s) at ChillingEffects.org.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Picture is worth 1k words (Score:2)
First, it was brought about be a private entity, not a government (Kazaa threatening Google).
Second, Google links to this page [chillingeffects.org] where you can see the request that was made, and which sites have been blocked.
This is much different. You're told content is missing, why, and what content it was.
Re:Picture is worth 1k words (Score:2)
I have to wonder, how many people in China are actually unaware of what happened there?
Re:Picture is worth 1k words (Score:2)
If their historical memory is anything like that of Americans, I'd say just about everybody...
Re:Picture is worth 1k words (Score:2)
If their historical memory is anything like that of Americans, I'd say just about everybody...
Well, that is just a stupid response. I bet everyone in the US who watched the events unfold in Tianemann won't forget them. That is the power of the US press at work. Now you don't hear about the other 1000's of massacres and abridgements of freedom in the world here in the US becuase the major news outlets generally don
That's a bit misleading (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't doubt that the Chinese government would want information about the Tiananmen Square massacre kept quiet. But that search just doesn't show evidence that Google has been complicit in keeping the information out of the hands of the Chinese citizens.
Rather, I think it's mostly a fucnction of what the significance of Tiananmen Square is across cultures. Americans are generally only familiar with the place as the result of the protests and subsequent crackdown. For Chinese, it's an historical place and a center of national pride; it's got more associations to it than just the crackdown.
You're mostly right... (Score:4, Interesting)
But the lack of images is nothing to with cultural significance. It's because anyone posting the images we know about is likely to be imprisoned. From stuff I have read, it appears that the massacre is still a huge secret over there. Many people know that
I'd like to see a worldwide campaign to tell the Chinese about it. Perhaps a web site that enabled you to print a letter to a random address in China. Seal and send, for 50c. Now get a thousand people a day doing it...
Justin.
Re:That's a bit misleading (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:That's a bit misleading (Score:3, Interesting)
I concurr. When I visited Tiananmen Square, it was full of Chinese tourists, many visiting for the first time. (it's a huge country). Tiananmen is in the centre of Bejing and it is at the entrance to The Forbidden City, probably the biggest tourist attraction in China. Many of them had never met a westerner before, I'm in many Chinese family phot
Re:Picture is worth 1k words (Score:5, Informative)
http://images.google.cn/images?svnum=10&hl=zh-CN&l r=&cr=countryCN&newwindow=1&q=%E5%85%AD%E5%9B%9B&b tnG=%E6%90%9C%E7%B4%A2 [google.cn]
Anyway, Tianmen Square is famous for a number of reasons in China, not just the Tianmen Square incident.
This might help you make your point (sort of) (Score:2)
http://www.google.com/search?hl=cn&q=wikipedia+ti
Uhuh (Score:3, Interesting)
Yeah, I can do something that benefits me and then think of a nice-sounding reason for it afterwards, too.
Re:Uhuh (Score:2)
It probably won't work... (Score:5, Insightful)
While I don't like Google's actions in China, they're not nearly as reprehensible as Cisco Systems (equipping and training Chinese Police to seek out those who have spoken against the Government using the routers to prosecute) and Yahoo (turning over contact information of those who were specifically targeted), so Google really is a more minor player here than the others anyway.
Re:It probably won't work... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It probably won't work... (Score:2)
Unlike the others, Google actually keep trying to tell evryone they "different". "Good", "Don't Be Evil". As such, they really need
Re:It probably won't work... (Score:2)
Put another way (Score:5, Insightful)
Being evil fits into the idea of "Don't be Evil" because by being evil we are showing the evil of being evil, therefor getting people to talk about evil critically, which is Good.
Very noble of them!
In all honesty, I think this is overblown. Congress should examine its own dealings with China first.... clinging to this cold war ideal that isolating a population will cause it to stop supporting its government has been shown to be false (Cuba anyone). Only buy engaging a population, and exposing them to more of American culture can we cause change.
Put another way, missiles didn't win the Cold War, Bluejeans did.
Re:Put another way (Score:5, Funny)
I, too, look forward to the day when a billion obese Chinese are driving around in SUVs...
Re:Put another way (Score:2)
Put another way, missiles didn't win the Cold War, Bluejeans did.
It was the US military build-up[*] during Reagan's era that provoked the fall of the Evil Empire. No Evil empire, no Warsaw PAct, no Cold war.
Thus, the missiles did indeed win the Cold War.
[*] More nuclear aircraft carriers, more submarines, more and better tanks and fighter airplanes... and, of course, Star Wars Project. Not the one with Luke and Leia, the other one.
Peace!
Re:Put another way (Score:2)
In other words, if Google wasn't there, local search engines would be more complicate and corrupt.
Nice try at appeal to emotions though.
Re:Put another way (Score:2)
Wrong [baidu.com]
Over here, everyone may worship Google, but over there they are just another player.
Re:Put another way (Score:2)
So instead of admitting your were proven incorrect, your new premise is that the mailing address and listing of a company determines its nationality?
I think the fact that many American and Brittish companies use that location for Tax shelter proves you incorrect.
Google's mantra of 'Don't be evil (Score:2)
this isn't right (Score:4, Funny)
Evil is relative? (Score:4, Insightful)
I think what is drawing the most attention is the fact that their motto, which touts corporate responsibility, is taking a back seat to profits. If you are going to paint yourself as the good guys then you should put that responsibilty ahead of profits. Otherwise just change your motto to -- "Out for a buck like everyone else."
And say they are looking to congress for moral guidance? What kind of a cheap cop out is that?
We need FCPA-2.0 (Score:5, Interesting)
We need a new edition, that will also make it illegal for US companies to cooperate with civil rights suppression by foreign regimes.
Call your lawmaker...
Re:We need FCPA-2.0 (Score:2)
Then what's going to happen to the catering companies that supply the CIA caffeteria?! Rendition doesn't happen on an empty stomach you know... at least for the renderers.
Re:We need FCPA-2.0 (Score:3, Interesting)
I guess this means that the astronomical sums of money we're spending on goods from a Communist country is not ending up in the government coffers & being used to pursue further opression.
Re:We need FCPA-2.0 (Score:2)
That's kinda the idea, at least IMO.
Re:We need FCPA-2.0 (Score:2)
Re:We need FCPA-2.0 (Score:2)
I'm hoping, they'll do something similar to Google — offer limited services. Unlike Yahoo! Google is not even offering e-mail in China, for fear of being forced to divulge their user's secrets to the state.
I
In Communist China... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:In Communist China... (Score:2)
In the US, Google helps you search the Internet; in China, Google helps the Internet search YOU!
If you're going to plagarize a cliché joke, at least do it correctly.[$pedant_mode->off()]
Spin doctoring a business decision ? (Score:3, Insightful)
So how is censorship going to encourage a freer place ? Misinformation is often more effective than disinformation, just like spies and assasins are more effective than soliders on a fort. The effect this will have is to prevent the majority from actually complaining, leaving the vocal minority of civil rights protestors looking like whiny children.
Didn't that mean give in to china or cuba or whatever country just to gain a toehold in that country.
As much as I'd like to believe all the moral claptrap in this release, I think the bottom line is clearly stated in the article as follows - The backdrop to Google's decision to launch Google.cn is the explosive growth of the Internet in China. and Google wants in. Yahoo has already made all the connections [yahoo.com] nearly half a year ago.To summarize - there's money in China and google.cn is going to be there too.
Google is not the fucking CIA (Score:3, Insightful)
A lot of people were pretty sure at one point that communism was a pretty enlightened and excellent idea. You can be damned sure that if the USSR started putting pressure on any organizations that they had influence over to spew communist ideology in the US, that people and government in the US would be pissy about it, and it would be considered "evil" by the people in the US.
Ultimately, revolutions come from within. If you don't have lots of discontented people, you aren't going to have an uprising. Maybe you can be the one to touch flame to tinder and accelerate things by a couple of years, but you can't build a revolution from nothing (but you can sure as hell antagonize people by trying). The folks in China clearly are not unhappy enough at the moment with the censorship going on to want to do something about it. All Google is doing is not trying to fight the social norms in China.
If Congress wants to run psyops, they can use the system that is already being paid for by my tax dollars -- Voice of America [wikipedia.org]. As you can see in the table on WP, China is now the leading target of US propaganda. The end of the Cold War kind of terminated our interest in poking the Soviet Union.
China is a competitive market, and one in which Google is not dominant. If you try to force Google to leverage their market influence in the hopes of pushing your own culture on someone else, you're just going to kill Google in that market. That's a really stupid idea if you're trying to export services like Google.
Crux of the Problem (Score:2)
(b) Second, our policy conviction that expanding access to information to anyone who wants it will make our world a better, more informed, and freer place.
Some governments impose restrictions that make our mission difficult to achieve, and this is what we have encountered in China. In such a situation, we have to add to the balance a third fundamental c
It worked .... does that mean it will it work? (Score:2)
"Google gave testimony on Friday to the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on International Relations."
"Google hopes to use this as an opportunity to help bring global censorship into the spotlight of American politics."
"Will it work?"
Naw
Er
Google's Spine (Score:2, Offtopic)
Today we don't know the fate of that brave young man, but we can safely assume that there is more steel in that young man's spine than any of the leaders in Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, and Cicso who would choose to clear the way for the Chinese tanks if they were
Re:Google's Spine (Score:2)
But not as much brass in his neck!
This is Amazing, so many uninformed statements (Score:5, Insightful)
Google has NOT shut down their chinese language servers outside China.
They have only ADDED servers in china that chinese folk can use to search WHICH THE CHINESE CITIZENS KNOW ARE CENSORED.
If the Chinese citizens want the uncensored, they still have the option of using the uncensored site and dealing with latency, but for the MAJORITY of their searches, they now have a nice and fast websearching utility. Think about it like this, you search for something, you see there is a censored site. Now you KNOW there is a censored site and can maybe search using a proxy etc.
Google has done an amazing thing here, and really has empowered people in china while still working within the laws.
I applaud their decision to offer a proper service to Chinese citizens who just want a quick search on local news etc. This is what MOST people want.
Ask yourself something. How many days out of the week do you spend looking up how to overthrow dictatorships, and then ask yourself how many times you look up your favorite music artist, favorite movie, favorite actor, favorite recipe?
As far as I'm concerned this was a logical decision and by google NOT shutting down their chinese servers outside the country, they have really shown they are attempting to help people.
Villainizing a company because they are attempting to help their shareholders and at the same time offering a service we all really enjoy and use for a variety of subjects is completely assanine.
Re:This is Amazing, so many uninformed statements (Score:3, Interesting)
They have only ADDED servers in china that chinese folk can use to search WHICH THE CHINESE CITIZENS KNOW ARE CENSORED.
Do they also know that the servers outside China are censored? Because google.com is returning the same results as google.cn if you set your browser to prefer the Chinese language or add &hl=zh_CN to your query string.
Google is Full of Shit (Score:2, Insightful)
Google is simply interested in making money. Anything else is spin. Most slashdotters would rail against MS or SCO for such a stunt, so the reaction should be the same here. Not bullshit rationalization.
notice how they're not rushing into Burma or North Korea offering similar terms, why? because there's no profit to be made.
Hanging in the wind (Score:2)
Given Microsoft's brutal corporatism and apparent relish for steamrollering anyone in th
Its a joke, really (Score:2)
http://news.ft.com/cms/s/b415d3ca-9e90-11da-b641-0 000779e2340.html/ [ft.com]
Re:Its a joke, really (Score:2)
Technology can make it happen. Filters can flush out dissidents and suspect sites. Whitelists can control whole swathes of the net. Faster and more efficient communication can make the Thought Police the leanest, meanest, most efficient organisation on the planet.
If the government has enought to lose, they will become a lot bigger and a lot less clumsy, and make sure yo
its not .cn NOT com , its .com AND .cn (Score:2, Informative)
1) google.com was being censored by Chinese authorities anyway.
a) since this was being done by the government at a third-party level, user experince was far from optimal.
2) google.cn censors keywords, thus maintaining optimum service. censorship is evil but this was happenign anyway.
3) Importantly, google.com is still accessible in China at the same level as it was before. Thus what google is doing i
Re:its not .cn NOT com , its .com AND .cn (Score:2)
Google's "censorship" has workarounds. Chinese gulags don't.
there is a line here (Score:2)
Maybe Google is working "undercover
anyone remember nancy reagan? (Score:2)
she was ridiculed for that, and rightly so, as "just say no" to drugs is a blatant simpleton's oversimplification of a complex problem
well guess what? "don't be evil" is the same sort of hilarious low iq oversimplification, and i'm kind of surprised at the slashdot crowd for not rolling in the aisles laughing at google
i'm really just waiting for the residual effects of being smitten with google in the early 2000s to wear off on the slashdot cr
Government hypocrisy (Score:2)
Or is that irony instead of hypocrisy? And is it ironic that China really doesn't need the cooperation of these companies, since with the Cisco routers they pur
Google is evil (Score:2)
An opportunity for ... what did he say!? (Score:4, Interesting)
So Google is now hopeful about the outcome of being called into congressional hearings so a bunch of politicians can bloviate about censorship? Huh?
I'm not going to say it's not possible that this is their intent, but it sure seems like there would be easier ways to do this as a company with the high-profile that Google has. In fact, it would seem it would have be more effective to publically state that China's censorship policies are too broad and back-out of censoring results, all the while jabbing at their competitors who *do* censor. This makes you look (and actually behave) like "the good guy", all the while bringing that same spotlight plus "good will".
I'm sorry guys. I like Google too. I want to defend them. But I can't bend on this one... every conclusion I come to says that this *is* evil. It should stop.
What I'd really like to know (Score:2)
You don't see the House of Representatives going after Nike for manufatcturing shoes in sweat shops do you?
This is a bullshit stunt. While I don't support what Google does, they reall should go after companies like Nike first. In the grand scheme of things, child labour is
half-truths don't exist (Score:2)
It's easy bog a discussion/argument down by obscuficating details each one of which could be argued ad nauseum forever with people debating statistics and what not.
I don't think it's an unreasonable assumption to say that the United States for all it's faults and hypocracy is a better country when it comes to
A B Comparison (Score:2, Insightful)
B. Local servers. Better service. Censored visibly. Improving market share.
I know which I think is better.
The hypocrisy, at least, isn't Google's. (Score:2, Insightful)
I'd far prefer to see him working for Americans' civil liberties than those of the Chinese.
Lesser of two evils (Score:3, Insightful)
For a moment, forget that Google will profit financially from its position in China and just think about which action most benefits the Chinese residents. To me, it's a no-brainer: Google's decision here was the best one available. Was it perfect? Of course not. But it seems there was no better option.
A lot of people seem to be under the impression that Google should boycott China. Why? A Google boycott of China wouldn't do anything to help the situation. China doesn't rely on Google like the free world does, and the impact of a boycott would be minimal. If you want real change to happen in China, the best move is to expose the Chinese residents to the most information from outside sources that you can possibly expose them to. That's exactly what Google is trying to do.
Re:Lesser of two evils (Score:2)
It's amazing what a few facts can do.
Remind me one more time... (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously, am I the only one who finds it the peak of hypocrisy to see the legislative body of a lone superpower blaming Google for not doing enough to bring about human rights reform in China?
Re:Remind me one more time... (Score:3, Insightful)
It does seem unfair. We should stop trading with China until it improves its human rights record.
When Walmart was allowed to import billions of dollars worth of goods, that already was a mistake. It's the same kind of mistake when we sold weapons to various extremists in the past, the same weapons whi
Also in Germany (Score:2, Informative)
Re:web server logs (Score:2)