Google Shareholder Proposal to Resist Censorship 100
buxton2k writes "Slashdot has had plenty of stories about technology companies like Google kowtowing to repressive political regimes such as China's. I'm an (extremely) small shareholder in Google, and I looked at their proxy statement today. Most of the time, shareholders' meetings don't deal with anything other than rubber-stamping the board of directors, but Google's upcoming meeting has a interesting shareholder proposal dealing with free speech and censorship to be voted on at the May 10 meeting."
Maybe I can start to trust Google again? (Score:5, Interesting)
The second line is "Whereas, the rapid provision of full and uncensored information through the Internet has become a major industry in the United States, and one of its major exports", but since all the rest of it really does sound like they're trying to do the morally right thing, I'm willing to say that line is there to get the vote of the pure capitalists.
There's also reference to the UN's Universal Declaration of Human Rights - rather than just a US-centric view.
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights [un.org] pretty clearly agrees with that:
So every once in a while Google regains a little bit of my trust.
Re:Maybe I can start to trust Google again? (Score:5, Informative)
The Funds' request was submitted by Patrick Doherty, The City of New York Office of the Comptroller, 1 Centre Street, New York, New York, 1007-2341
Didn't the directors suggest a no vote?
Required Vote
Approval of the stockholder proposal requires the affirmative "FOR" vote of a majority of the votes cast on the proposal. Unless marked to the contrary, proxies received will be voted "AGAINST" the stockholder proposal.
Recommendation
Our board of directors recommends a vote AGAINST the stockholder proposal.
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This is slashdot after all. I figure I might recycle the joke once in a while, and being a geek, I modded it.
Re:Maybe I can start to trust Google again? (Score:4, Insightful)
You might want to try some anti-depressants.
Seriously, the shareholder referendum, if approved, would basically tie Google's hands in regards to dealing with an oppressive regime such as China -- it would leave them no option, even if say, agents of the U.S. federal government came to them and said something like "Don't rock the boat. We're working on a strategy here and if you make noise, you'll spoil the whole thing."
Not that I'm implying this has ever happened or anything...
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Would it?
Larry Page, Sergey Brin & Eric Schmidt own the vast majority of voting shares.
If they don't want a shareholder's propos
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Why?
This is a shareholder resolution, not something drawn up by Google itself. In fact, if you look at the end of the statement, you will see the the Google BoD is recommending a vote AGAINST this resolution, presumably because it will cost the company money...
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Re:Maybe I can start to trust Google again? (Score:5, Insightful)
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So every once in a while Google regains a little bit of my trust.
Actually, if you read the proposal you will see the Google recommends AGAINST this proposal.
From the article: "Recommendation Our board of directors recommends a vote AGAINST the stockholder proposal."
Who you really should be giving trust is The Office of the Comptroller of New York City who is submitting the proposal as a large stockholder.
From the article: "The Office of the Comptroller of New York City has advised us that it intends to submit the proposal set forth below for consideration at ou
Without the board, not much chance. (Score:5, Insightful)
I've been a shareholder in a bunch of fairly big tech companies (which is not to say that I've been a big shareholder) and in only one case have I ever seen a shareholder resolution unsupported by a company's board actually pass -- and that fairly recently [pionline.com] and was widely supported by a lot of big institutional investors (who presumably only care about their ROI, and not how the money is made). (This is excepting hostile takeover actions, I'm referring only to things in the normal course of business.)
I don't know precisely how many shares of Google stock is held by the board, but I'm going to bet that it's a lot, if not a majority outright, meaning that it's probably sunk without them from the get-go.
And, like it or not, most of the big shareholders of any publicly-held corporations are going to be pension and mutual funds, investment banks, and other companies -- not the sort of entities that are generally swayed by feel-good rhetoric; they're not interested in whether Google oppresses Chinese people, only whether said oppression is profitable (and legal, because its legality directly impacts its future profitability).
I appreciate the efforts of people pushing these resolutions, but I think that if we want to change the behavior of our corporations abroad, the change needs to be legislative, so that it wouldn't adversely impact "good" companies by making them less competitive relative to "bad" ones -- which unfortunately means it would need to be via that sausage-factory we have in Washington, which given its propensity for fucking up everything it touches, is probably a Bad Idea overall.
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It's NOT a real fund -- Other Peoples Money (Score:2)
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I'm not suggesting that this is a good or a bad idea, but I AM suggesting that it is horrible (and corrupt) when public officials use public (or other people's money) for their own gain. Sure it's not an outright embezzlement like putting money in his pocket would be, but using the money to score political credit with people that will help him make more money...
Well that isn't behavior I like to see lauded as good...
Put up your own money, survey the shareholders, whatever, but to do something with other people's money for your personal benefit...
Sometimes this is demanded by the civil servants with money in the fund. For example, NYC cops and firemen did not want their pension money financing Iranian business activity. After pressuring Halliburton, GE, and Conoco-Phillips to stop doing business in Iran, they either stopped their subsidiaries' business activity in the country, or were dropped from the fund. Bill Thompson, NYC Comptroller, testified about this today in the Senate Commerce subcommittee hearing, "Halliburton and U.S. Business Ties to [videowebca...rce043007m]
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1) Data that can identify individual users should not be hosted in Internet restricting countries, where political speech can be treated as a crime by the legal system.
All this means is that Google can't host their servers in place like China but it doesn't mean that they con't reveal the information.
2) The company will n
Well... (Score:2, Insightful)
This would be the same reason that owners of GM stock don't pass a resolution requiring the company to shift all their R&D into ethanol research - it doesn't make good business sense right now.
Expansion *in* China? (Score:5, Interesting)
This is more like a shareholder resolution that GM make some currently optional safety equipment standard. Which, history shows, would be good business sense.
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What logic? People who pay them money are there customers and I don't see how logic would dictate that
PS: When you do the web search their product is the chance you click on an add and their customer is the company paying for the add your just the sheep being spoon fed.
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In the third world, mobile phones are the *cheap* way to get telephone service.
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The point is that there is a huge market and demand for such gadgets. And it's not just the third world where mobiles are cheaper than land lines.
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Yes, so what? We're talking about Google here... not Samsung, Motorola, or Nokia.
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We're not JUST talking about phones. They are an indicator that there's money available for other things than the bare necessities even in the "third world".
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Um, what makes you thnk cellphones aren't necessities?
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Well, I don't have one, for a start.
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Actually, I live in China.
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That's completely unrelated to my comment. They can do that whether or not the servers are hosted in China, or whether they do any censorship beyond what the Chinese government explicitly requires by law, or whether they explicitly inform people when information is being blocked.
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Even the shrewdest of investors would gladly see that Google would want to do business where it is easiest to do so most profitably.
So long China!
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What this stock holder vote will do is expose who at google believes that censoring freedom and democracy for profit is acceptable.
Don't think t
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Isn't Google owned 50% + 1 share by the two founders?
So can't they pretty much tell the shareholders to stuff themselves regarding these proposals?
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Disclaimer: I'm a shareholder in several major tech companies, not Google though.
This will NEVER pass. Not in a million years. There are similar points on most Annual General Meeting's agendas, introduced by the shareholders. Here's what you usually get:
Now, you always g
A small shareholder's take... (Score:3, Interesting)
Will my 15 votes change anything? Hell no, but it's like voting for a 3rd party presidential candidate. At the end of the day I can go home happy that I actually did what I thought was right.
Interestingly enough, another ballot item was (paraphrased) "should we give the directors a big bonus for being so aw
Note the Recommendation of the Board: Against (Score:5, Interesting)
From p32: Recommendation Our board of directors recommends a vote AGAINST the stockholder proposal.
Capitalism == Situational Ethics....
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As does life.
I think it's a ballsy move to put it to shareholder vote. Obviously, the large shareholders and the fund managers who are acting in the best financial interests of their clients will probably concur with the board on this one. It is nice PR move though, I guess (as are all the
One assumes it's a business decision like any other, but I'd be curious to know the f
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They're required to put any qualified proposal to a vote. Despite what the submitter thinks, largely symbolic politicized proposals are routine at any large public corporation.
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But I guess that is where capitalism IS compatible with something not laissez-faire: fascist control of information.
***Resisting urge to obey Godwin's Law***
Evil will always win... (Score:5, Interesting)
This line made me think:
3) The company will use all legal means to resist demands for censorship. The company will only comply with such demands if required to do so through legally binding procedures.
It made me think of all the "evil" companies that see breaking the law (and the associated fines or sanctions) as just the cost of doing business. On the other hand, a "good" company that basically says, "we will do no evil... unless we're breaking the law by doing good".
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This whole thread is stupid (Score:1)
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This thread is about censorship, which is by no means agreed upon. Google is
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Right, I think that's what is difficult about the whole Google/China censorship thing. If you ask people whether companies should participate in government censorship, most of us would say no. However, if you ask whether companies should be bound by the laws of the land, I think most of us would say yes.
You might be thinking that this is a different issue because it's a Good American company against the Evil Chinese government, and the Good American rules should trump the Evil Chinese rules. However, I
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Considering some of our laws, half of Slashdot might start dancing in the streets.
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I don't think Americans would like it if some foreign company set up shop in America, started breaking American laws, and when caught exclaimed, "But your laws are wrong!"
That explains the large Japanese automotive presence after the Buy America law was made and to some lesser extent, illegal immigration after 1986. Circumvent the law or lobby against enforcement, the sound is the same.
Right, I think that's what is difficult about the whole Google/China censorship thing. If you ask people whether companies
Re:Evil will always win... (Score:5, Insightful)
Given that the law is often evil (like laws imposing segregation, or laws criminalizing victimless crimes) this is no useful metric whatsoever.
If it's illegal to give a "western" haircut in Iran, and women who wear a leg-revealing outfit can be whipped for it, then it's easy to see that the law itself can be evil.
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(Ok, let the Godwin comments begin, but it's still relevent)
Matt
Founders control all the votes anyway (Score:4, Informative)
submitting proposals (Score:2)
The submitter doesn't say how small of a shareholder he/she is and obviously the NYC Comptroller controls more shares but publicly traded companies have to have a mechanism for shareholders to submit proposals to the shareholders' meetings. Usually there's a minimum holding for a minimum time, like 1,000 share for 180 days prior to the meeting
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Perhaps it's not just about China... (Score:3, Interesting)
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I keep having to say this... (Score:4, Interesting)
In the dark ages, science was dead. It wasn't until trade with the east brought goods AND ideas west that society started shaking up a bit. People started figuring out that there were alternatives to feudalistic society.
In short, trade equals exchange of ideas. Exchange of ideas equals social change. Social change equals social revolution.
Google had two choices with China (and any other country that wants censorship): Be blocked entirely from the country in every way possible, thereby preventing exchange of ideas and hampering social change OR get a foot in the door to the country, providing access to new concepts to the Chinese and thereby slowly bringing about social change and potential revolution. YES, some things are censored, but as we all know, no censoring software is perfect, and humans won't think of everything. With Google there, EVEN censoring things, ideas of freedom will leak through and spark social change.
The decision to bow to the wishes of China's censorship in order to gain access to their populace was a good, moral decision.
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Google are nuts if they thing they're that important or powerful.
In my experience, Chinese people here use Baidu not Google, and they don't consider the US definition of freedom to be something particularly desirable, even if they consider it at all.
It's Yahoo! you really need to worry about (Score:5, Interesting)
Whilst Google are up for a bit of censorship, Yahoo! actively assist the Chinese in tracking down dissidents and getting them put behind bars [theregister.co.uk]
They responded by talking about 'vexing issues' when they were pushed on the matter [yahoo.com]. Vexing indeed, that somebody is stuck in a cell for demanding democracy because you wanted to "look after shareholder's interests".
They say they were just complying with a "lawful request" but at some point you have to realise that certain counties are going to ask you to abide by laws you find distasteful and take the hit on not doing business in those countries. Would Yahoo have done a deal with South Africa in the 1980s? With Germany in the 1930s? Or would they have got stuck in, claiming they might be able to 'transform opinion' by way of allowing people to share (censored) pictures and arrange (authorised) events?
And they might say now that they are sorry for what happened, but they are still in China and they must in some part be willing to comply with future "legal requests" so there's a question: if the Chinese government asked for help tomorrow, would Yahoo! assist? Or would they risk being shut down in China? I suspect for all their hand-wringing, they'd hand over the paperwork but this time do their best to keep it quiet.
There's a line that Yahoo! crossed that Google is far from crossing just yet, and I think this story is indicative of how they might hope to keep it that way.
By laying out an independent moral framework aligned with UN declarations, it's possible for a multi-national to make a call on whether they can go into a country or not, or to what extent. If China wants to control and watch every bit, every byte, we as an International community with personal stakes in democracy and liberty have a role in saying they shouldn't have access to best-in-class technology whilst they want that.
The Chinese Government should not be granted the ability to be able to run surveillance over their population really well thanks to the work of engineers in Yahoo's or Google's HQ - we should be making them want this tech enough that they are prepared to compromise and grant rights to the population currently kept from them, so the tech can't be used against a population.
That's our job. Software runs civilisation. As software developers/companies, the moral imperative is with us. We are the arms manufacturers of the future, because the weapons will be software loaded with information as the ammo. We direct this gig. We don't realise it yet, but we do.
We should be saying "you don't get Google, you don't get yahoo, you don't get any of this, until you treat your people as we would wish to be treated, as we agreed by way of UN charters all mankind should be treated". Saying that by exposing China to this tech will somehow change how government works is like saying you can fix Darfur with some really noble op-ed pieces in the New York Times.
If I held Yahoo! stock, I'd sell it. I'd tell everybody else I know to sell it if they held it too. If Yahoo! say the only barometer of morality is how well the stock is doing, everybody needs to sell up and make it clear why: at that point the needle swings from "profitable to be in China" to "OMG! WTF are we doing in China? The stock is tanking!".
FWIW, I've not used a single Y! product (including flickr or upcoming) or API since they've become the henchmen of brutal dictatorships. I'd ask others to consider doing the same too.
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It seems to me that Chinese people don't really want Google and/or Yahoo! in China. It's the other way around. I
Get over yourselves (Score:2)
And by the way, who runs the office of Evil Arbitration and Determination? Ask them if it more or less Evil to
1. do business in China by China's rules (and thereby make money for the employees and inv
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> Communism
Now this isn't really directed at you, but in my personal view, with nothing apart from experience to back it up, is that the need for (significant) censorship is only while the country develops and the need is dwindling as the country prospers.
I think the history is that communication has been such that people tend to believe the things the read and/or are told - especially people out in the
About friging China (Score:3, Interesting)
Do no evil, but what about YOU? (Score:2)
There is a portion of slashdot users who believe the war in iraq is about oil. Wether this is true or not is another discussion. The question is, what do you do about it?
I think that a bumper sticker on your SUV with "Impeach Bush" is not entirely convincing.
There is a portion of slashdot users who believe that the Chinese goverment is a dictatorship who opress their peoples (and others like Tiber and less directly Taiwanese) rights. Wether this is true or not is another discussion. The question is, what
Fluff (Score:1)
Sorry for trolling, but all the google fluff is starting to annoy me.
This approach failed with Microsoft (Score:1)
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/microsoft/20 03289541_microsoftholders05.html [nwsource.com]
The board of directors and the large investors never go for stuff like this. A company does not exist to make the world a better place, to live ethically, or for any of
Larry&Sergey can outvote all other shareholder (Score:1, Informative)
Larry Page and Sergey Brin, between them, hold enough Class B common shares to control more than 51% of the vote
Google doesn't care what its shareholders think (Score:5, Informative)
... because they don't have to.
When the company IPOed, they issued two classes of stock: one that you could buy (Class A), and special shares for Sergey Brin, Larry Page and Eric Schmidt [usatoday.com] that carry 10 times the voting weight of the shares available on the public market (Class B). The result is that anything that Brin (founder), Page (founder) and Schmidt (CEO) don't want passed can't be passed by a shareholder vote; ordinary shareholders simply don't have the voting muscle, even if they all voted together.
Google's rationale at the time was that this arrangement would free them from pressure to constantly be posting higher earnings each quarter. In their SEC filing, they included an unusual "Letter from the Founders [sec.gov]" that defended the approach:
(Emphasis mine)
It's hard to read the part about "retain[ing] many of the positive aspects of being private" as anything other than "we don't want shareholders telling us how to run our company". And given how the stock is structured, shareholders can't, unless they can win over one or more of the three top execs at Google to their point of view.
Solution (Score:2, Interesting)
A second action is that Google could report periodically how many search items are blocked by various governments. A large part of the insult to the user is the perception that we are receiving all thats available. If resu
I'll be the bad guy (Score:1)
Snowball's chance in hell of passing (Score:3, Insightful)
These kinds of morally upstanding proposals are common by gadfly shareholders. The only thing worthy of note in this effort is the fact that it was proposed by a large fund, not some wingnut. Bravo for them.
However, morals have little place in the commerce of business. I am a corporate cynic. Thus, I am certain that no corporation is going to stand up for freedom when there is money to be made cooperating with repressive governments.
The likelihood of passage, against of votes and recommendation of the board of directors, is nil.
What's interesting (Score:1)
Would this change anything? (Score:2)