Search Companies Questioned About Chinese Policy 312
Romerican writes "The U.S. Government is questioning Google in relation to corporate behavior under anti-bribery laws. The government is also questioning Yahoo, Microsoft and Cisco about their dealings with the Chinese government. Where do Slashdotters see this going?" From the Red Herring article: "There is precedent for the U.S. government establishing laws governing the conduct of U.S. companies abroad. During 1977 the U.S. government enacted the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), which was substantially revised during 1988. The provisions of the FCPA prohibit the bribery of foreign government officials by U.S. citizens and prescribe accounting and record-keeping practices. Opponents of the law said it would severely restrict the ability of U.S. companies to compete in many countries where bribery was part of the commercial fabric." ats-tech wrote to give us the link to Google's response to these events, via the Googleblog.
Good (Score:2, Insightful)
Instead, everything here has become so much driven by money that ethics and values become irrelevant when it comes to business. Oh, please don't give me that relativistic bullshit.
The Chinese government has killed thousands of its own citizens in massacres and throws its people into jail without a trial for speaking out against the establishment. The
Re:Good (Score:4, Insightful)
http://wi-fizzle.com [wi-fizzle.com] Fo' Shizzle Dizzle!
Re:Good (Score:2)
What has China learned? That if they censor people, they get what they want. they get access to the largest commercial search engine.
If Google had instead continued
Google needs China (Score:3, Insightful)
I think you're really overestimating the uniqueness of Google. In this situation, China was fine with blocking Google forever. They'd either cut a deal with MSN, Yahoo, Altavista, etc. or let their own hundreds of thousands of engineers build a Chinese Google-like search tool.
The other factor prompting Google to cave in is that they're
Re:Good (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Good (Score:2)
Re:Good (Score:5, Insightful)
I agree with you. Unfortunately, the sad truth is that our own system is screwed.
The likely scenario: Google stands up for freedom and says that China will not receive service. Great, but: 1) The shareholders would oust the executive board immediately and install people who could see past all that "human rights" baggage to do business with 1.2 billion potential customers; 2) The shareholders would also sue under American Law that makes it illegal for a corporation to do anything purely humanitarian (see: Henry Ford); 3) Google would be signing their own death warrant, as Microsoft and Yahoo! serve the Chinese market, making tons and tons of money and reinvesting at least part of it (if they were at all smart, enough to ensure that Google died) back into the search business.
So, I can forgive Google to some extent. It's a shitty situation but they honestly had no choice from a business perspective. Until our government gives up this ridiculous idea that a little taste of democracy and freedom will have the rest of the world screaming for it in due course (see: recent Palestinian and other Middle Eastern elections), nothing will come of this. We'll continue to see our manufacturing and other industries outsourced to countries that have no labor protections and totalitarian governments with an agenda using our products to oppress their own people.
This isn't something Google can fix. This is one of those things where the government has to wake up, realize that the invisible hand isn't doing a goddamn thing to change these people's lives for the better (Nixon opened our markets and diplomats to China, and we're talking about them 40 years later the same way we were in the 60's), and take action.
The problem is that taking action means, literally, putting our money where our mouth is, which I don't think many Americans have the stomach for.
C
Re:Good (Score:4, Interesting)
You're right, it's too late for Google to fix it. It was too late the day of the IPO.
The shareholders would also sue under American Law...
Which is exactly why being a publicly held corporation and the motto "Do No Evil" are simply incompatible. The only way for Google to truly be able to maintain the moral high ground was for it to remain privately owned.
The lesson here is that if you own a company and don't want it to be forced to mindlessly pursue profit at any expense, don't go public. Just don't do it.
Re:Good (Score:2)
It was too late the day that Google accepted the first investor. If they investors don't get what they want, they replace the company's execs. Considering that Google was started with VC funding, I'd say it was "too late" from day 1.
Re:Good (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Good (Score:2, Interesting)
You can't know this for certain. In fact, in this case, I think you're just plain wrong. Google has been very good to its shareholders. Google's executives could defend any action to not do business in China, and I don't think anyone would really complain.
If Google decided not to do business in China, it wouldn't make much
Re:Good (Score:2)
I noticed this notion spreading alot this morning during the earlier google story. I simply don't believe it. I don't believe most shareholders would have the gall to stand up and say "censorship now!!" - especially if the American public made it very clear that supporting Communism has costs of its own back h
Re:Good (Score:3, Insightful)
1) The shareholders would oust the executive board immediately and install people who could see past all that "human rights" baggage to do business with 1.2 billion potential customers
True in general. Not true for Google. http://www.logoogle.com/google-ipo.htm [logoogle.com]
How much is in the glass? (Score:2)
Yes, there will be restrictions, and yes that will silence some important information, but the greater good is the wealth of information that will be readily available to an individual
Re:Good (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Good (Score:2)
Re:Good (Score:2)
They would, however, be evil if they gave a record of searches to the Chinese government, giving the government the ability to take action against citizens based on the search terms used. If a country were to demand that Google actively participate in repression against its own Cit
What country are we from here? China?! (Score:2, Flamebait)
This does not make any sense to me. Google actually hires American workers, not Chinese, so why do I care if Google censors in China?
Out of all the companies we decide to declare anti-American, Google is the first company that comes to your mind?! You have many companies which hire slave labor in China, and there are no huge slashdot debates about human rights when this happens. You have many big companies that outsource American jobs to China, and no one does anything about it. You have many situations whe
Re:Good (Score:2)
Hmm, that reminds me of any country and "terrorists".
Re:Good (Score:3, Informative)
This is supposed to be the land of the free, home of the brave. The US is supposed to pride itself as being the beacon of light of democracy and the free world.
Instead, everything here has become so much driven by money that ethics and values become irrelevant when it comes to business.
I'm still trying to reconcile these two statements. When you say "ethics and values", you must mean your own ethics and your own values (and if not, whose are you referring to?). If this is the land of the free, then w
Re:Right-wing nuts may mod me down, but screw it.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Easy. If that were true, we would have been free-basing oil from Iraq years ago.
You topple democratic governments (like in Chile, Iran, Haiti, etc.) and install unelected despots in their place.
Funny, I don't remember Iran being a democracy.
Get your own house in order before you start lecturing other people about what's right and what's wrong.
No country is in perfect working order. But there is a reason that millions
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Right-wing nuts may mod me down, but screw it.. (Score:2)
Go back and read the post. Do you understand the meaning of "try?" Your moron president probably had the same thing in mind when he pushed for this disastrous invasion.
Funny, I don't remember Iran being a democracy.
I'm not surprised. Here is the news. It WAS before the democratic government was deposed (by the USA) and replaced by the weak Shah, later to be deposed by the Ayatolla.
Re:Right-wing nuts may mod me down, but screw it.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Most of us would love nothing more than that, but alas since the masses don't seem to realize that they are the ones in power nothing changes. We need a major upset in our political system but while the two majority parties may "hate" each other they will protect each other against a third party gaining anything more than a fringe following.
I would promote violent overthrow, but that is a capitol offen
Re:Right-wing nuts may mod me down, but screw it.. (Score:2)
Why not just bring back crucifixion while you're at it? No American will ever be able to lecture anyone about human rights or civilised behaviour again (not that
Re:Right-wing nuts may mod me down, but screw it.. (Score:2)
Yeah, they used it about once in forty years and even then it was for mass murder. Hardly Texas.
Interesting... (Score:5, Insightful)
Exactly why do you think the U.S Government is interested in Google's dealings with China?
Is it because:
or...
Please submit your answers below. Don't forget to show your work.
Re:Interesting... (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, if you'd read the article, you'd have read that Google was not the only company that was called - Yahoo!, Google, Cisco and Microsoft were called -- all the top 4 companies with Internet presence.
The submitter made it seem like it was just Google, but it seemed to be a human rights panel calling forth all the companies that could do something about censorship in China.
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Actually, if you'd read the article, you'd have read that Google was not the only company that was called
Actually, I did read the article, thanks. While Google wasn't the only company that was called, they are the only company that is currently holding out against the government's demands for search terms.
Yahoo!, Cisco and Microsoft
In the trade they call this collateral damage. Perfectly acceptable.
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
And you're saying that the government cares so much about this issue that they're willing to sacrifice other executives and companies who have complied?
Wow, just give Google another reason to go along with this government anti-pornography campaign-- apparently, they can still get screwed even if they do cooperate.
Tossing around completely baseless conspiracy theories is nothing if not counterproductive.
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Yeah, Iraqi civilians knows very, very well that collateral damage is "Perfectly acceptable".
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Uh, so what? You just said it yourself--they weren't the only company called. So doesn't that kind of damage your claim that this is punishment for holding out on the requested search results?
In the trade they call this collateral damage. Perfectly acceptable.
Oh, I see, you believe it so it must be true. This isn't exactly "showing your work" as y
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Oh they just can't get it into their heads that foreign countries are governed by foreign people and not by the US.
Indeed (Score:5, Funny)
Yep, the US is a pretty bad market to lose.
Re:Indeed (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Indeed (Score:2)
Sometimes it's best to leave a good humor alone, those who get it, get it, those who don't, may probably never will.
Another question (Score:2)
who knows... (Score:2, Funny)
Nothing New for Google (Score:5, Insightful)
Schmidt and Brin both fly around in a personal Jet which uses an absurd amount of fuel. They've justified this by saying that they encourage their employees to buy hybrid cars, and so on the whole they're making a net decrease in fuel consumption. They make the same kind of argument with respect to their dealings China hear - "On the whole, we're doing more to benefit the chinese people than by just leaving them with the crappy system that was in place."
The problem with google's line of ethical reasoning has to do with their predictive capabilities. How in hell do you evaluate which is better? The only widely recognized framework whereby decisions as to what is best for a large number of people can be made is a democratic election/governmental process. By entering the chinese market and agreeing to help the chinese government hide its hideous record, google is saying that they know what's best for the chinese people. Anyone who gets pissed off about right-wingers forcing their religion down other people's throats ought to be equally mad about this, becuase it's the same situation - one group of people deciding they know what's best for others.
A jet (Score:2)
So if they're taking their private jet home from work everyday, that would be bad. If they're using it to fly to meetings halfway around the country... what do you expect them to do, take a Greyhound?
Re:Nothing New for Google (Score:2)
Re:Nothing New for Google (Score:2)
I was more interest in the statement by Google that they comply with similar (but much more limited) requests by the USA, France and Germany. I'd like some details on just what they would suppress in my searches.
Nothing to see here... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Nothing to see here... (Score:2)
You're too cynical. There has been a long running debate in both Washington and Europe over whether trade with China will eventually help China democratize or not. Whether or not to allow China to join the WTO and be given Favored Nation Trading status and treat human rights as a separate issue or instead to link trade issues directly to human rights was fought out during the 1980s and 1990s with good
Haha! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Haha! - Not Quite (Score:2)
I don't believe you can just cash in your government bonds before they're due. You would instead need to sell them on the bond market, which would drop quickly with such a sudden influx (supply and demand). While this would indirectly pressure the government due to the surplus of bonds making it harder to sell new issues, it would hurt the seller a lot more as t
Re:Haha! - Not Quite (Score:2)
Re:Haha! - Not Quite (Score:2)
If we're at war, the U.S. will simply enact legislation that says that Chinese bonds are null and void, or no longer available for cashing in.
During wartime, the Government keeps a very strict, conservative, and quite unfair grasp on the economies of the world. In WW2, everyone was mobilized for war. No cars, no phone service, nothing that was contrary to the war effort. Enemies will have ZERO leverage on U.S. assets.
Re:Haha! (Score:3, Insightful)
Long live Taiwan - an Independant Taiwan.
What are they talking about here? (Score:4, Interesting)
Does anybody here know exactly which laws - and what search results - they are referring to, relative to the U.S.? I never knew Google removed any results in the U.S. I find that idea a little unsettling, to be honest. What is the U.S. strong-arming Google into hiding???
Re:What are they talking about here? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:What are they talking about here? (Score:2)
I don't understand what was filtered out, if anything.
Re:What are they talking about here? (Score:3, Informative)
"Som reaktion på ett klagomål som stödjer sig på USA:s lag "Digital Millennium Copyright Act" (DMCA), har vi tagit bort 2 resultat från den här sidan. Om du vill kan du läsa det DMCA-relaterade klagomålet som orsakade borttagningen av ChillingEffects.org."
It's almost a word-for-word translation of the text displayed at
Re:What are they talking about here? (Score:3, Informative)
At the bottom it will say:
n 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.
At least Google is being consistent with obeying the law of the land.
Re:What are they talking about here? (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:I know how to sidestep the whole issue! (Score:2)
Re:I know how to sidestep the whole issue! (Score:2)
(ideally, this is supposed to become a kind of meritocracy - it doesn't due to cheating and the ability of corporations to suppress their competition through law, IE. everything the RIAA does...)
In a COMMUNIST economy, theoretically the money is
Bribery (Score:3, Insightful)
Rome (Score:2)
So companies shouldn't follow the laws (Score:3, Insightful)
Do no evil - 404 (Score:2, Informative)
At the very least this is definetely a change in Google policy. As noted today on Google Blogoscoped [outer-court.com] Google has removed their entry on c
Comment removed (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What's filtered in the US? (Score:2)
crymeph0 posted one further up on this page here [slashdot.org]. It has a DMCA takedown notice at the bottom.
Re:What's filtered in the US? (Score:2)
They're referring to take-downs resulting from copyright enforcement, especially under the DMCA. However, a private party fighting to keep its IP from being widely disseminated is a very different thing than outright censorhip, like in Germany and China.
The US doesn't have actual censorship[1], at least not as far as Google results are concerned. This [google.com], this [google.com], and this [google.com] are a
Here is the crux of Google's response... (Score:3, Insightful)
>Filtering our search results clearly compromises our mission. Failing
>to offer Google search at all to a fifth of the world's population,
>however, does so far more severely. Whether our critics agree with
>our decision or not, due to the severe quality problems faced by users
>trying to access Google.com from within China, this is precisely the
>choice we believe we faced. By launching Google.cn and making a major
>ongoing investment of people and infrastructure within China, we intend
>to change that.
In other words, Google has put it's "mission" (its business interests) ahead of what is morally right. Rather than simply take the other, unmentioned option, that is, simply refusing to compromise and not provide any Google services at all, they have compromised so that they can have a market presence in China, lest someone else develop one internally that might come to rival Google later on down the road.
To be fair, I think Google's response in TFA was fair and reasonable - from the perspective of a corporation. It was a hard decision, and they made the best they could - for the corporation. But dammit, I don't like it one bit. This idea of multi-national corporations setting up shop in repressive countries and then claiming, "We're just complying with the local laws" smacks way to much of the old "I was just following orders" line. As far as I'm concerned, such corporations are complicit in the repression and they are profiting off of it to boot.
If corporations cannot be counted on to shun such morally bankrupt regimes then there should be consequences for them in the countries that have bled to preserve liberties.
Steve
P.S.
Please no responses about how such liberties have declined even in countries like the USA. That is a separate discussion.
Re:Here is the crux of Google's response... (Score:2)
Altering results in the US? (Score:2)
I don't remember ever seeing that Google filters its results in the U.S. I checked on their TOS [google.com] and didn't see anything (other than Google disclaims any and all responsibility or liability for the ... legality... of information or material displayed in the GOOGLE SERVICES results.), is
google just crossed over to the dark side... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:google just crossed over to the dark side... (Score:2)
His definition of the today US capitalism is really good and accurate. Sometimes you find jewels even on
Blame the shareholders and greed (Score:2)
Also as another poster posted, Google could be sued for violating laws that prohibit companies for being humanitarian? Henry Ford lost a case on this.
Its absolutely disgusting that its illegal to not be evil and a requirment of supporting what you described. Money is the root of all evil and I surely agree with this.
Google is the victim is how I see it. If they take a stand someone else lik
I was going to make a joke... (Score:2)
Retribution against Google (Score:3, Insightful)
So now, Bush sees an opportunity to get revenge on Google. Don't get me wrong, I'm not any more happy about Google's deal with China than anybody else is. But let's not pretend that this administration has suddenly seen the light and cares about human rights. Let's call this what it is: an opportunity being taken by the Bush administration to go after a company they consider to be an enemy.
Re:Retribution against Google (Score:2)
I see a very disturbing pattern here. You are either for him or agaisnt him and with this spying crap going on I see us literally turning fascist by the day.
Violation of Rights??? (Score:2, Insightful)
Last I checked the Chinese government never agreed to any list of unalienable human rights. Did the UN or any other international body ever decree that the right to post blogs bitching about your government is a fundamental right belonging to all pe
Re: (Score:2)
Google has to restrict information in US? (Score:3, Interesting)
Google has to restrict information to comply with US laws? Are there something I am missing?
Isnt it a little late? (Score:5, Interesting)
Everywhere I look, I see "Made in China"... if that isnt collaborating, its definitally financing the imprisonment and torture of Chinese citizens, as well as financing our own eventual demise...
Deal time (Score:3, Funny)
Somone from the back of the laundry shop yells... (Score:2)
CUSTOMER (to Asian cashier): "Ancient Chinese Secret, huh?"
http://dt2.prohosting.com/70s/adulttv/calgon.au [prohosting.com]
Google is doing nothing for the Chinese (Score:2)
This argument is nonsense: Google is not the only source for search engines in the world. If Google doesn't serve the Chinese market, someone else will. Even if Google, Yahoo, Altavista, Microsoft, and everyone else refuses to serve the Chinese market, believe it or not, but people in China could create a search engine. Or ipeople n some other country less hesitant
Heh (Score:2)
Hates Us (Score:2)
No wonder the rest of the world hates us.
See your "corporate behavior" (Score:2)
How goddamned retarded do you gotta be to start poking at China while already having hands full with a bunch of other nations....
Oh.. wait. Nevermind.
Or does the government have an ulterior motive (Score:2)
I would not be surprised considering Bush punished several corporations who gave money to Kerry in 2004 so now they can't bid on government contracts but republican companies can.
I smell a rat.
What about Bush dealing with countries like Uzbeki (Score:2)
Keep in mind Bush and co were kicked out and never faced the consequences of dealing with and cooperating with a government notorious for its human rights abuses.
Looks like Google pissed Bush off and he's pulling out whatever tricks he can to punish Google. Wonder what happened to the party that supposedly is against government regulation.
Cisco? (Score:2)
At its most basic, Cisco stuff routes and switches, it doesnt censor unless the end user tells it to with ACLs and filters and whatnot, most of which are implemented by responsable and ethical sysadmins in a responsable and ethical way every day.
China is using the e
Who supplies the Chinese w/ filtering equipment? (Score:3, Insightful)
The real question is who is selling China the infrastructure equipment to make all of the filtering they do possible. Now that is some company that is making a killing. They have got to be spending literally 100's of millions of dollars, perhaps billions, to do what they do. It's no wonder the US govt. wants to talk to Cisco. They will need one of their undocumented backdoors [cisco.com] so they can go in and spy on the Chinese.
Look it's their country, right. If they were so worked up about it over there, why don't they do something about it. A billion people can't be wrong can they. And if a billion people want freedom why don't they have it already. You can't tell me that if they really wanted to be a democracy or whatever they couldn't make it happen.
So in the end, Google is doing what most of us Americans do, look the other way, buy our cheap ass Chinese made plastic shit and poor quality Wal-Mart goods and go home to our cable TV or MMORPG and forget about what's really going on out there. It's just what the corporations want you to do - go to work everyday, spend your money on crap you really don't need, never have enough so you have to borrow more because you have to have the latest stuff and in the end that's what we call freedom. Yeah right.
Tiananmen Square (Score:3, Informative)
Frail humans on foot don't stand much of a chance against tanks...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiananmen_Square_prot ests_of_1989 [wikipedia.org]
Sadly, because I've mentioned Tiananmen Square here, we'll be blocked by Google from all of China. Except for the people who were there and saw what happened, this is one o
It's a Trap! (Score:3, Informative)
In other news, nearly all the money spent in Iraq for recontruction was stolen by American contractors. Bribes are paid out in every direction. No news there.
In other other news, the K Street Project has made the Republicans the most paid off people since the Teapot Dome scandal. Bush's people are stonewalling the investigation, and the pictures of Bush with Abramoff are being destroyed as the President says they aren't relevant to the investigation (which he is not cooperating with). Nice to know that the Unitary Executive can tell the Congress what is and isn't pertinent to any investigations of the Unitary Executive.
But he can sure pull the switch on others. Yowza!
Hamas. Snicker. Sorry, couldn't help that.
What will ultimately happen (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:How nice, (Score:2)
Re:How nice, (Score:2)
Re:How nice, (Score:2)
Interestingly, a UCLA/Stanford study showed Fox News was the most centrist news channel. I've noticed when liberals mock Fox News, they never, EVER actually cite an example of their bias. It's just an idea they've accepted and spread over the years
Re:How nice, (Score:2)
What facts? That anyone left of Atila the Hun is an ultra-leftie Godless commie?
Re:How nice, (Score:2)
Is there any possible criticism of another country, ANY AT ALL, which you annoying fucks won't turn into yet another meandering invective against Bush, Halliburton, Guantanamo, etc.?
I'm not sure...the magnitude of Dubya & Company's evil makes it damn near impossible. You know, there's a reason that there's a 'Bush corollary' to Godwin's Law...
You are the reason the Democratic party is floundering with no hope of winning elections in the forseeable future.
I know...integrity is such a fucking millstone.
Re:How nice, (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:We are more like the Ferengi everyday (Score:2)