Brinksmanship Continues In Google-China Row Over Censorship 133
Posted
by
timothy
from the should-I-stay-or-should-I-lost-carrier dept.
from the should-I-stay-or-should-I-lost-carrier dept.
According to The Financial Times, "Google has drawn up detailed plans for the closure of its Chinese search engine and is now '99.9 per cent' certain to go ahead [with the closure] as talks over censorship with the Chinese authorities have reached an apparent impasse, according to a person familiar with the company’s thinking. In a hardening of positions on both sides, the Chinese government also on Friday threw down a direct public challenge to the US search company, with a warning that it was not prepared to compromise on internet censorship to stop Google leaving." "99.9 per cent" or not, both sides say they'd actually like Google to remain in China, but neither is willing to bend publicly on the question of censorship. If Google closes google.cn, as now seems likely, it could still maintain its R&D office in Beijing and its sales force, who sell ads on google.com targeted into China.
Well, that's good to hear (Score:3, Interesting)
It's nice that they're taking a stand, even if the gap will be filled by Baidu fairly quickly.
Do It (Score:4, Interesting)
What changed? (Score:3, Interesting)
Google is the only one that stands to lose... (Score:3, Interesting)
Google could stay there and stay on top because they have the best product (for now). If they leave the market, something will fill the vacuum and profit greatly from the billion.s of people in China.
I don't think China has much to lose here, I'm curious as to whether or not someone has a good convincing argument to the contrary?
Google the political player (Score:1, Interesting)
It's funny, I don't recall Microsoft ever having this kind of pull, to be able to influence the market on a political level. But everyone uses Windows so I guess they're in for the profit all the way. Google apparently is a little different.
Re:What changed? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm a bit of a cynic, but it seems to me that Google wanted to leave China after they were hacked, and made an unreasonable (in context) offer to China in order to make the Chinese look like the "bad guys" and Google look like the "good guys."
Brinksmanship? (Score:0, Interesting)
Why do you say that? It looks like a contract dispute to me, and if they can't come to terms, business will cease.
Talking about keeping open the marketing and development office shows that. If it were brinksmanship, they'd just pull out.
The shareholders are not going to accept Google forgoing huge profits for ethical reasons. That's not how corporate governance works.
Re:Well, that's good to hear (Score:5, Interesting)
I totally agree. Google is taking a stand for freedom on the internet here and it will hurt their business. Microsoft doesn't give a shit about freedom and will increase their business.
People need to really look at what companies do and judge who they should do business with or not. If Microsoft will be willing to sell the internet freedoms of Chinese citizens down the river for a buck, whats to say that someday they won't sell the internet freedoms of American citizens too?
Take it to the people (Score:2, Interesting)
My humnle theory (Score:5, Interesting)
What this is all about.
Recently quit a lot of independent security researchers and companies showed evidence that if you do any kind of business in China, you are BOUND to be hacked by "someone" from China. They also said that there is no defence against it (the China attacks will eventually always succeed).
Google was one of the victims of such attacks. They considered the facts. What do we get by doing business in China?
1) Small market share (the Chinese search engine Baidu dominates the search engine market in China)
2) Trojans on our internal networks.
Let's give up (because of 1 and 2). But let's do it in a way that wins us PR points. Let's do it in a way that makes us look good. Like, true fighters for freedom.
Let's tell them we're not going to obey their laws and regulations. We (Google) KNOW that they will not allow us to get away with that. But we don't care, because we've decided to leave anyway.
Re:What changed? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Wow... (Score:5, Interesting)
Is Google actually delivering on their "Don't be evil" thing?
It's Sergei, mostly.
Can't find the reference right now, but there's a story out there in which it's posited that his childhood experience in the Soviet Union left him with an aversion to coercive state power. He allowed himself to be talked into going into China by Schmidt and Page, but when it became clear that China was using them to target human rights activists, Sergei baulked.
Having agreed at the outset to put limits on what they would put up with from China, Larry and Eric had no choice but to go along when Sergei insisted that they retaliate.
Re:It's not Google's job (Score:4, Interesting)
It's not Google's job to tell the Chinese government how to do things, no matter how wrong they think those ideas are, or how Google justifies those beliefs.
What? That makes no sense whatsoever. Google is a U.S. corporation, and could not under any circumstances "tell" the PRC to do anything. The PRC can, on the other hand, tell Google how it must behave when operating within Chinese territory.
... quite the opposite in fact. What Google is objecting to is China's government telling Google how to run Google's business. China is insisting on concessions that Google's founders (in particular, Sergey Brin) are unwilling to accept. End of story. That is their choice and, oddly enough, it's being a U.S. corporation rather than a Chinese corporation that allows them to make that decision. If the converse were true, if it were Baidu being told to bend over and take it, well, let's just say they would do exactly what their government handlers told them to do.
Consequently, Google isn't telling anyone how to run their government
The point being, the average US guy has screwed up beliefs concerning China's motivations behind Internet control.
I see ... and the average Chinese guy has a clear understanding of U.S. motivations behind our current hands-off attitude towards Internet control.
Don't make this into more than it is.
Re:Well, that's good to hear (Score:3, Interesting)
I believe it is the first step in bringing an entire nation forward. Unfortunately, they chose actual oppression over a benevolent dictatorship.
I want them to catch up with the rest of us, because as their people become more educated, they will want to know about this thing we call "Freedom" (speaking as a Canadian, not that the US isn't "Free"). Then people start to get angry, blah blah blah.
However, I still am against oppression and censorship, as what really matters here is an intelligent, free citizenry. Censorship (among other things) is a good way to slow that process, and losing science is a good way to slow the censorship process.
It's a complicated web, and pulling one string tugs on many others. Pull on them enough, and if it unravels around a competent populace, they will rebuild around their current ideals. Hopefully their ideals are right, if not, the process will start again.
Since time immemorial.
Re:Wow... (Score:3, Interesting)
I thought I had remembered that too. One of those fun-filled-but-fail-at-a-party facts I have stuffed away. The boys still own Google, or enough of it to decide it's course over any objections by share holders et al.
I feel certain that if Google pulls out of China, they're fucked, so to speak. How then can MS or Yahoo be seen as non-corrupt if they stay? While it's political in nature it has a certain PR value to it as well. Baidu, while fairly well used is basically by Chinese, for Chinese, about Chinese. Outside of China its usefulness falls very quickly. Inside of China it filters whatever it's told to filter. The Chinese, it seems, remain isolationist. Now if we could only paint Walmart et al as evil for doing business with the Chinese. If you want to see the Chinese people free, help motivate them to be angry with their government. Right now, Chinese school children can look at a picture of tank man and not know what it is. Stopping a little censorship won't change that. There needs to be enough anger to spill the blood of tyrants.
I'm afraid that probably won't come till there is no jobs, no money to buy food, no exports income, and no way to buy food from across the border. Culturally, China (as stated above) is stagnate-ish, stuck in their ways, isolationist culturally. You have to do a lot of shaking to get those nuts to fall out of the tree. It may take a lot more people like those running Google to shake the tree hard enough. I hate to say it, but a good international news-making incident might be enough to encourage North Americans to stop buying Chinese made goods. If that hurts North American retailers in the short term, it will hopefully hurt Chinese manufacturers in the long term. A tricky game to say the least, but if you want to play it without guns somebody has to get shot with something in the somewhere at some point.
Perhaps if /b/tards and fag hating Christians stopped their normal crap long enough to petition our government to inspect 100% of incoming goods from China at a cost to the manufacturer it might make a difference to their bottom line, our pets' and children's lives, and the world over all ? It would be awful if Google were to rank stories about Chinese goods higher than they have been doing... don't you think? wink wink nudge nudge
Re:My humnle theory (Score:1, Interesting)
"Small market share"? There are ~300 million internet users in China. Google has about a third of the search market. 100 million users is not small by any measure.
In five years' time, a third of the China search market will be bigger than the whole US market.
Re:But the converse is? (Score:2, Interesting)
OK. Say that they leave. Will the attacks stop? You still have valuable assets, perhaps at new locations..
You eliminate an entire class of attacks, i.e. those which originate from the Chinese government on a network they control. Further, you can simply block all traffic from China and eliminate a whole other raft of it. This leaves proxies &c of course, so it prevents nothing, but it certainly reduces a lot of attack surface. If they're not really making any money there anywhy, why bother?