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Censorship Communications Microsoft The Internet Your Rights Online

Microsoft Bans 'Democracy' for China's Web Users 430

Doc Ruby writes "As reported, paradoxically, on MSN, 'Microsoft's new Chinese internet portal has banned the words 'democracy' and 'freedom' from parts of its website in an apparent effort to avoid offending Beijing's political censors.' MSN China says it must comply with local laws, but there is no Chinese law against the use of these words."
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Microsoft Bans 'Democracy' for China's Web Users

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  • by TripMaster Monkey ( 862126 ) * on Saturday June 11, 2005 @11:54PM (#12792788)


    Remember Pastor Ken Hutcherson [slashdot.org], and how he leaned on Bill about the whole gay issue? Where the hell is he now?
    Surely, if he and his band of fundies can kick up that much of a fuss about homosexuality, they can certainly flex their muscles in the defense of human liberty and dignity.
    C'mon, Ken...you've still got Bill's number...and here's a cause actually worth fighting for.

    • Some guy leans on MS for defending human liberty and dignity, and now you want him to lean on them for NOT defending human liberty and dignity? I'm confused.
      • My take on it is that somehow i suspect even if they wanted to "lean pressure" on that company. Despite the fact that MS has a 50% stake in it, there's not a lot that can be done from so far across the ocean.

        I mean, it's in fricking CHINA and the joint venture company would be acting relatively independant of the parent company (in the US), sure it answers to the parent company, but i'm sure that the MS umbrella would leave it the hell alone when it comes to the myth of "local laws" in a place like china
      • by Doc Ruby ( 173196 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @12:17AM (#12792909) Homepage Journal
        The pastor leaned on MS to back down on defending its employees' human liberty and dignity, in the name of religion. Now the poster to whom you responded wants the pastor to earn back some respect by leaning on MS to actually defend human liberty and dignity. That's not very confusing. Unless you're hellbent on using religion, whether Christianity or Communism, against liberty and dignity.
  • by XanC ( 644172 ) on Saturday June 11, 2005 @11:55PM (#12792792)
    ...there is no Chinese law against the use of the use of these words.

    The more heinous laws may never be written down.

    • Would they ban the use of the term "falung gong" though? i have a sneaking suspicion that they just might.
    • by CrazyDuke ( 529195 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @12:34AM (#12792972)
      Most people think of censorship as the government putting it's foot down and outright banning words or topics. Actually direct government intervention is not necessary.

      All the government has to do is:
      -pass regulations penalizing media outlets
      -refuse to inform the outlets when releasing news items
      -ignore questions and refuse to call on certain reporters during press conferences, if not outright banning certain people
      -use other media outlets to turn one into a scape goat
      -sabotage reporting for that outlet with false evidence from "anonymous" sources
      -start accusations that the reporting is reclessly endangering others and threaten to prosecute
      -"accidently" shoot at and imprison field reporters
      -consistantly confiscate all of above reporter's recordings and notes as "evidence"
      -question the patriotism and loyalty
      -etc

      ...of media that "doesn't play ball." Any capitalist corporation will bow under such pressure because their primary driver is not integrity and values, but profits. If you are in the business of reporting news, patially or exclusively, you don't make any money if you don't have news to report or if your consumers think it's all lies.

      • by Doc Ruby ( 173196 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @01:01AM (#12793066) Homepage Journal
        No one is as fervently "anticommunist" as the mafia. The same way mafia "families" are "antimafia", when it comes to murdering their competing mafia families. Because they're the competition. That's why the mafia has been so connected to American anticommunism work. And so much blowback, like Kennedy's assassination, Iran/Contra cocaine dealing, etc. All these ideologies are just propaganda for the tyrants to convince the people to work for their own oppression.
    • A true story: someone in Russia discovered that if you type the sentence "Legal capacity is a person's capacity to exercise rights and fulfil obligations" (in Russian) in MS Word with Russian spellchecking turned on, Word will immediately exit. It's probably just a bug, though, not a deal between Microsoft and the Russian government.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday June 11, 2005 @11:56PM (#12792797)
    cuz they must be hating freedum and stuff...
  • by guyfromindia ( 812078 ) on Saturday June 11, 2005 @11:59PM (#12792814) Homepage
    C2lick her3e for our dailey s1pecial on d3mocrazy!
  • by bryan8m ( 863211 ) on Saturday June 11, 2005 @11:59PM (#12792817)
    ...Microsoft will ban the word "monopoly"
  • by ravenspear ( 756059 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @12:01AM (#12792826)
    Microsoft agreed to ban "innovation" from its international search portal to filter any potential self referential promotions that might run afoul of stricter false advertising laws in other countries.
  • MSNBC? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Loonacy ( 459630 )
    Anyone else think it's odd that this is being reported by MSNBC?

    Hey! Check this out! The company i work for is being immoral!
    • I was kind of impressed by that, actually. Maybe they're just overcompensating in order to avoid an appearance of conflict of interest, but the net result is that (at least for now) they're not afraid to report unfavorable news about their parent company. Let's hope that lasts.
    • Re:MSNBC? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by a whoabot ( 706122 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @12:56AM (#12793055)
      It's just part of the ongoing propaganda to make the Chinese government look corrupt in a way above and beyond Western governments in the eyes of people reading about this. With a proper, though perhaps dehabilitatingly sad perspective, you can see that corruption is everywhere: not just with those people whom most of us really know nothing about.
      • Re:MSNBC? (Score:3, Informative)

        by Doc Ruby ( 173196 )
        This story is true, and tells terrible truths about the actual tyranny in China, and even American corporate complicity in it. The dangerous propaganda is the silence on American "corruption", and our government's own attacks on democracy and freedom. The dangerous propaganda is that silence that fetishizes America; the truth about China is propaganda dangerous only to China.
  • No law? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by guardiangod ( 880192 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @12:06AM (#12792855)
    MSN China says it must comply with local laws, but there is no Chinese law against the use of the use of these words."

    Law? You don't need law to enforce the will of the party in China.

    PS. Before this is mark flamebait- I am a chinese.
    • "PS. Before this is mark flamebait- I am a chinese."

      May I ask you an off-topic question?

      Some of the stories I've read about China here on Slashdot lend to the painting of some really dark pictures. It makes me wonder: Is it bad there or is it more like a different mode of thought? I know little to nothing about Chinese culture, so I hope you don't mind my ignorance.
      • Re:No law? (Score:4, Informative)

        by guardiangod ( 880192 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @01:36AM (#12793173)
        Normally law does apply to citizens, provided that you know your local policemen well enough that they actually goes through the trouble (1. not exactly a bad thing, they just do thier work faster if you give them a cigerette 2. most of them don't take large amount money bribe nowaday- the central government is really harsh on this kind of thing these days). However when you get to political (against the party) or economic (smuggling for exp.), the government draws the line.
    • Re:No law? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by node 3 ( 115640 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @02:04AM (#12793271)
      Law? You don't need law to enforce the will of the party in China.

      It's like that in the US now, too.
  • by mingot ( 665080 )
    Does google filter its content for china?
  • by Slur ( 61510 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @12:07AM (#12792859) Homepage Journal
    Is Microsoft saying, in effect, that if Beijing ever decides to crack down on democratic movements Microsoft will be happy to provide dictionaries and spellcheckers with the proscribed thoughtcrimes removed? Boy they really have learned a lot about lobbying since the antitrust trial.

    Last I heard China was working on their own operating system to supplant those of the West, so Microsoft might be wasting their time.
    • Is Microsoft saying, in effect, that if [the rulers of a country where they do business] ever decides to crack down on democratic movements Microsoft will be happy to provide dictionaries and spellcheckers with the proscribed thoughtcrimes removed?

      You really think they're gonna sacrifice their empire for mere romantic idealism? You better believe they're gonna ride whatever tide comes ashore, in *any* part of the world.
    • Microsoft: delivering the office productivity tools the modern Chinese bureaucrat needs to torture dissidents and promote worldwide cultural revolution.
  • RedHat (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Moderator ( 189749 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @12:09AM (#12792867)
    As I recall, RedHat was criticized a few years ago for removing the Taiwanese flag from their distribution to appease potential customers in mainland China. Let's face it, China is a huge market to get into; if a company that refused to ship an MP3 library with their distribution can be seduced by the Chinese market's potential, what good is a little democracy or freedom going to do to prevent Microsoft from acting in the same manner? It's all about money.
    • Re:RedHat (Score:5, Interesting)

      by CrazyDuke ( 529195 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @12:52AM (#12793042)
      You just reminded me of something. I take it most of you that follow American politics even a little know about all the whining over 10 of Bush's judicial appointments? Well, after years (and particularly so in the past several months), of shrill complaints by the GOP that the Democrats where delaying and obstructing the "up or down" votes of these nominies, they finally got their way.

      This is where it gets good: During the discussion over one of the nominies a few days ago, just before the vote, the Republicans demanded the debate be shut down and the vote put off. And, the Democrats agreed. What had been so important for them to put a halt to what they had wanted for so many years?

      Well, it was announced that 2 communist Chinese businessmen had arrived in the captal building. And, yes, in a show of bipartisan support, both the Republicans and the Democrats stopped the important work of running the nation to both go and meet the businessmen. Not even a vote on a motion taken, just simulatious agreement.
  • ...references to the People's Democratic Republic [korea-dpr.com]!
    • holy crap, that is comedy gold right there.
    • by poopdeville ( 841677 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @01:03AM (#12793075)
      Interesting... minutes after visiting that page I got this e-mail from "james.bruns@fbi.gov":
      Dear Sir(s) or Madame(s)

      It has recently come to our attention that someone in your household or corporation has recently visited http://www.korea-dpr.com/ [korea-dpr.com]. Due to this minor infraction, your constitutional rights have been suspended. Moreover, your children will be deported to Guantanamo Bay for interrogation and re-education.

      I am not speaking for the agency when I say that I think you are a disgusting excuse for a human being. Your lack of respect for our fundamental freedoms is appalling and you deserve everything you'll get. Thousands of American boys have died protecting your freedom from despots like Saddam Hussein, and you just throw it away. You make me sick.

    • Insightful and funny. It just goes to show how out of it MS PR is. It's one thing to understand the Chinese government has a problem with the idea of democracy, but to assume that they therefore have a problem with the word democracy is a stretch.
  • by Jackie_Chan_Fan ( 730745 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @12:18AM (#12792911)
    They want our money but not our beleifs. That's their right. But what are we getting from them in return?

    How does it benefit OUR citizens? As you can see... China's priorities clearly have nothing to do with our beleifs, our products or our labor force. China only wants our dollar, and corperate America just wants slave labor?

    Why do we allow this to continue? What is the real benefits of allowing our US based corperations, to exploit the world and devalue our country?

    • Ironic.. (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 12, 2005 @12:29AM (#12792952)
      ..coming from someone named "Jackie Chan Fan."

      Clearly, the benefit for American citizens is cheap products. Benefit for American corporations: higher margins.

      Yep, not a lot of long term thinking going on here in America. Buying everything on credit, spending money on high school football instead of advanced courses, etc. We're on the brink of getting our asses royally kicked.

      That said, most Chinese I know really like America and Americans, just not our politics. As for me when I am there, I happen to like living in a god-less country, but I'm not so enamored with the totalitarian part. There isn't a perfect country to live in- when I live in China, I have simply traded one kind of stupidity for another.
  • link to the website? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Doppler00 ( 534739 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @12:24AM (#12792930) Homepage Journal
    Okay, the most annoying part of this article is that they never bother to LINK to the new website. What is the point of talking about a new website in a news article and not linking to it?

    My quess is this [msn.com.cn] is what they are talking about.

    Of course, I don't know how to spell "freedom" in Chinese, but if you compare these two searches:

    US [msn.com]
    China [3721.com]

    You can get a pretty good idea of what they block. And to think, we have U.S. companies helping them to achieve this....
    • I searched for 'zi4you2' and 'min2zhu3' ('freedom' and 'democracy', respectively; romanizations used in lieu of the actual characters) on msn.com.cn, and I saw no warning. I think the article is suggesting that the words may be blocked on some areas on its MySpace blog service.
  • Reminds me of... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by D H NG ( 779318 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @12:36AM (#12792984)
    In the Vietnamese Wikipedia [wikipedia.org], where I'm a sysop we actually had a discussion about how to translate the motto The free encyclopedia into Vietnamese. Many people were against translating the word "free" literally because it would throw off a lot of readers and the Vietnamese authorities and make it a target for the filtering software installed by the authorities. So we finally reached a compromised and used "open" instead of "free".
  • Well, hell (Score:4, Insightful)

    by rscrawford ( 311046 ) <rscrawford AT undavis DOT edu> on Sunday June 12, 2005 @12:38AM (#12792995) Homepage Journal
    That's an awfully un-American action for such a large American company. If we're so committed to spreading democracy throughout the world, then it seems that every individual and corporation ought to act like we really do believe in the values that we profess. Otherwise, they're just words, and we really do prove who we are by our deeds.

    And because I'm a left-wing radical like Justice Rehnquist, I can't help but wonder how long before the same thing happens here?
  • So what will they call our soon to be built, Freedom Tower in NYC? :) The F****** Tower? [Note: Think of a colorful medaphor that fills the missing letters :)]
  • by tetrahedrassface ( 675645 ) * on Sunday June 12, 2005 @12:54AM (#12793051) Journal
    Microsoft: we like money...

    China: we like money....

    Microsoft: pay me....

    China: we can get it for free...

    Microsoft: WE can ensure your communist rule by limiting freedom.

    China: wha? freedom? There is no freedom... only work!

    Microsoft: Let us show you the way..

    China: Deal!


    D

  • by astrashe ( 7452 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @12:57AM (#12793058) Journal
    I know this is pretty cynical, but Microsoft can't change China. I think it's unreasonable to expect them to burn all their bridges there in a futile attempt to change things that they can't.

    As a nation, we (the US) have decided to look the other way about whatever problems China might have, in exchange for money. A huge proportion of the stuff at Wal-Mart is made in China. We swallow our principles and take the cheap prices.

    Why should MS be better than anyone else?

    China is really big and really powerful. They're so big and powerful they can tell MS to shove it. And they can tell the US to shove it. If or when China changes, it will be because Chinese people do it. No one is going to push them into doing anything they don't want to do.

    • A huge proportion of everything is made in China. Wal-Mart scapegoating doesn't help here. Look around the room you're in right now, and look at the labels on everything. I bet if you make a count, China comes ahead 2-1.

      Cue people contradicting me here - I'm just trying to make a point. I'm sure everything in your house from the game controllers to the pens are all made in the good ol' USA.

    • China is really big and really powerful. They're so big and powerful they can tell MS to shove it. And they can tell the US to shove it. If or when China changes, it will be because Chinese people do it. No one is going to push them into doing anything they don't want to do.

      And would they go to such great lengths to suppress the concepts of things like "freedom" and "democracy" if those in power didn't fear that a sizable amount of their people wanted to decide what was best for China? I hate to sound l

  • How many times have you seen a corporation that was actually democratic? To create such a beast requires a conscious effort to bend the rules. Generally, a corporation is a paragon of dictatorships. The people at the top give the orders, and the people below them follow those orders -- or else. Where's the inherent democracy and freedom in that?

    Back about a decade ago, one shell executive was quoted as saying that what any corporation needs, is political stability, and a compliant, cheap workforce == and dictatorships are really good at providing that.

    Capitalism does not embrace democracy. It simply tolerates it in the context of western societies. In other countries where there is no need to push for democracy, why should a company do so? The linkage between the two is pure political sugar-coating. This is part of the reason for the tension between capitalism and Free Software (and why 'Open Source' seems like a compelling compromise). Free Software is about Freedom, choice and equality -- none of which really serves the purposes of your average corporate meta-entity.

  • I for one, (Score:2, Troll)

    by mbkennel ( 97636 )
    "I, for one and speaking for MicroWalSoftxxon Corp, welcome our new Chinese Communist overlords."
    -- Steve Ballmer.

    don't moderate this as "Funny" either
  • by CyricZ ( 887944 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @01:40AM (#12793185)
    What about the freedom Microsoft has to run (or not run) whatever content they wish on their web site? You can't have true freedom if you force people to extoll freedom and democracy.
  • by Metostopholes ( 592245 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @01:42AM (#12793194)
    You also couldn't talk about "freedom" and "democracy."

    Oh wait, the joke doesn't work like that, does it?
  • Google (Score:4, Funny)

    by minus_273 ( 174041 ) <aaaaaNO@SPAMSPAM.yahoo.com> on Sunday June 12, 2005 @01:47AM (#12793216) Journal
    Keep in mind, when google pulls a stunt like this, its ok.
  • I find this odd and interesting. Most Chinese I've met feel they are free. Also, democracy is as old in China as the Communist party: Mao Ze Dong's little red book has a whole section lauding the advantages of democracy. In fact, this seems to be a move against the government by Microsoft. The best way to censor would be to not bring up any pages when someone searches for "democracy". Letting them know they entered a forbidden word will make them more aware of things they can't do, and will make them f
  • Pointless (Score:2, Interesting)

    by liangzai ( 837960 )
    I don't see the point. Take a look at http://bbs.chinadaily.com.cn/ [chinadaily.com.cn] for an example of Chinese debate on various topics. Although articles can be pulled if deemed too offensive (this is a newspaper, whose existence dependes on the party's benevolence), there are no simple words like democracy or freedom that are forbidden. Chinese censorship simply doesn't operate on that level.

    On the site you can see examples, mostly in English and sometimes in Chinese, of pretty straightforward debate on most sensitive is
  • Incidents like this are why blogs are rapidly overtaking Big Media as the average individual's main source of news. It's a type of natural selection, perhaps. A news organization that fails to deliver truthful news will be usurped by individuals or organizations who will.

    While it's often said that the quality of blog content can't be guaranteed, events such as this show that the very same holds true for Big Media. Quality is not guaranteed by any media source.
  • by Mulletproof ( 513805 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @02:53AM (#12793383) Homepage Journal
    So, did the people flaming microsoft today also note that Google the Wonderchild Company basically did the exact same thing a few months ago? Somehow, i don't think you'll see half the outrage over THAT incident, if only because this one involves "M$"
  • I find it funny... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by edunbar93 ( 141167 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @05:24AM (#12793723)
    Isn't it odd that a gung-ho American company that's all for free market capitalism can so very easily make itself look like a soul-crushing, freedom-hating, communist-friendly entity by just removing a couple of words from all its websites?

    Kind of says something about the state of affairs in America these days.
  • by Morgor ( 542294 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @06:28AM (#12793831) Homepage
    I thought I might test the thing, to see if the article is right, and I decided to write about the process here while I do it.
    First of all, my chinese isn't very good. I study chinese, but I started last september, so I don't read that many characters...

    But first off when trying to create a msn.com space, is the passport account. So I decided to create a chinese hotmail account, with the data of a young student living in Beijing. That was only a little tricky. The two obstacles I ran into was finding the zip code of Beijing, and finding out what I had to do in the text box on the last page next to the email address I just created. The zip code was quickly solved after finding the homepage of European Centre For Chinese Studies at Beijing University, and their address... The text field, I found out after numerous tries, was just a reconfirmation of that same email. Having the email address and passport account created I was sent back to the My Space creation page.
    I decided my space should be called 'ziyouheminzhu', being the words 'freedom' 'and' 'democracy'.
    Just to check, I entered that in Chinese characters as the name of the blog and clicked continue. A fat red text popped up saying "You cannot use forbidden words!".
    So the article is right, but for the sake of maintaining a critical view to journalism, I thought I had to prove it...
  • by curious.corn ( 167387 ) on Sunday June 12, 2005 @06:30AM (#12793839)
    I have this horrible feeling; I'm sorry if it sounds xenophobic or racist, over here in Italy there's an ongoing campaign to blame chinese imports for our faltering economy and I don't want to sould like I'm supporting it. China's economic relevance is growing at great pace, huge amounts of investements pour into this country and nascent market. Corporate executives visit China and literally break into tears at the discipline and chockedness of the workforce. In the early '900 Italy's capitalists experimented with going without a liberal government; they chose fascism. A totalitarian regime that while touting a better form of socialism essentially used brute force and liberty suppression to coerce the population and stamp out dissent in favour of the priviledged. Today, I read about China, about our investors moving their operations in China, about these condescending corporations; I can't get this idea out of my head, that the CCP and investors from all around the world are trying the same trick. "What if there is a more efficient system, a social organization more attuned to corporate operations instead of this old, kludgy and costly democracy?" I hear them asking. Corporations have gone supernational for many years, during the Cold War they had a political restraint on how much they could go without breaking ties and embrace the "enemy". Today there's no such thing; the world is a giant supermarket where these amoral entities can choose what best suits their business plans and are now voting with their feet. It's depressing to see a billion human beings made to bear part in a global experiment without benefiting from it, and to fear that sooner or later we'll be told to live by the same rules...

I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning. -- Plato

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