Cosmo
Radioactive Rationalist
- Joined
- Jul 23, 2004
- Messages
- 1,182
Earlier this year, BBC News (and others) reported that Google has agreed to censor its search results in China in exchange for being allowed to participate in the undoubtedly lucrative Chinese search market. Chinese users who google for terms like "democracy", "tiananmen square", "taiwan independence", and other government-defined terms will receive a heavily-censored list of results.
For example, Chinese users who google for "falung gong", a spiritual group outlawed by the Chinese government, will receive only government-approved websites and propaganda that denounce the movement. The same search performed in the US retrieves a Wikipedia page as well as the organization's website and other relevant links.
It should be noted that Google is not the only search firm in this situation. Yahoo, and other non-Chinese-based search engines, have also agreed to censor their results in exchange for market entry in China. Google's oft-quoted unofficial motto is "don't be evil". Many in the US and worldwide have criticized Google in particular, however, stating that the company's actions in China are precisely that - evil.
Personally, I find myself divided on the issue. The Internet is more than just a series of tubes; it's the best telecommunications and information tool humanity has ever invented. I believe that we're only scratching the surface of the Internet's potential, and to really make great leaps forward in telecommunications and globalization we need to be as inclusive as possible with information and ideas.
On the other hand, however, I wonder if we in the US and elsewhere have reasonable ground to stand on when we criticize China's overbearing government. Cultural relativism suggests to me that the Chinese government at least in theory has the best interests of its citizens in mind. It's easy for us in the US and elsewhere to criticize infringements on freedom of speech (and search) because we've largely not had to deal with them on the scale that Chinese citizens have, so are we making a problem where none really exists?
On the other other hand, I realize that there are at least two stakeholders in play. Is it the Chinese government that is in the wrong for having such restrictive policies and censorship plans, or is it the foreign corporation that is in the wrong for agreeing to accept and further the policies and plans of that government? Or neither?
So, what say you all? Did Google do the right thing? How about the Chinese government?
For example, Chinese users who google for "falung gong", a spiritual group outlawed by the Chinese government, will receive only government-approved websites and propaganda that denounce the movement. The same search performed in the US retrieves a Wikipedia page as well as the organization's website and other relevant links.
It should be noted that Google is not the only search firm in this situation. Yahoo, and other non-Chinese-based search engines, have also agreed to censor their results in exchange for market entry in China. Google's oft-quoted unofficial motto is "don't be evil". Many in the US and worldwide have criticized Google in particular, however, stating that the company's actions in China are precisely that - evil.
Personally, I find myself divided on the issue. The Internet is more than just a series of tubes; it's the best telecommunications and information tool humanity has ever invented. I believe that we're only scratching the surface of the Internet's potential, and to really make great leaps forward in telecommunications and globalization we need to be as inclusive as possible with information and ideas.
On the other hand, however, I wonder if we in the US and elsewhere have reasonable ground to stand on when we criticize China's overbearing government. Cultural relativism suggests to me that the Chinese government at least in theory has the best interests of its citizens in mind. It's easy for us in the US and elsewhere to criticize infringements on freedom of speech (and search) because we've largely not had to deal with them on the scale that Chinese citizens have, so are we making a problem where none really exists?
On the other other hand, I realize that there are at least two stakeholders in play. Is it the Chinese government that is in the wrong for having such restrictive policies and censorship plans, or is it the foreign corporation that is in the wrong for agreeing to accept and further the policies and plans of that government? Or neither?
So, what say you all? Did Google do the right thing? How about the Chinese government?
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