Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Yahoo! Allegedly Helps Beijing Arrest a Third Reporter

Posted by Zonk on Thu Apr 20, 2006 08:50 AM
from the not-looking-good-man dept.
reporter writes "According to a damning press release from Reporters without Borders, Yahoo has helped Beijing to locate, arrest, and imprison a 3rd reporter. This latest incident occurs about 2 months after Yahoo testified, under oath in front of Congress, that the company regrets being 'forced' to help Beijing." From the article: "'We hope this Internet giant will not, as it has each time it has been challenged previously, hide behind its local partner, Alibaba, to justify its behaviour. Whatever contract it has with this partner, the email service is marketed as Yahoo !' the organisation said. According to the verdict, Yahoo! Holdings (Hong Kong) confirmed that the email account ZYMZd2002 had been used jointly by Jiang Lijun and another pro-democracy activist, Li Yibing."

Related Stories

[+] Yahoo May Be Facing Suit Over Chinese Journalist 80 comments
WindBourne wrote to mention a story covered by Forbes, detailing a possible suit against Yahoo! as a result of their involvement in a Chinese Journalist's jailing. From the article: "Zhang Yu, representing the family of Shi Tao, said they were considering taking Yahoo Hong Kong Holdings to court either here or in the United States. 'We believe what (Yahoo) did was illegal so we are considering taking Yahoo to court,' Zhang told reporters, adding that Yahoo had refused to discuss the matter with him. "
[+] Politics: Yahoo Allegedly Sells Reporter Out to Chinese Authorities 379 comments
truckaxle writes "Yahoo! has been accused, again, of providing information to Chinese authorities that resulted in the imprisonment of a Chinese journalist. Yahoo! apparently provided Chinese police with internet activity information in a case that resulted in the arrest of Li Zhi. His crime - trying to join the dissident China Democracy Party. Yahoo! says it simply responds to requests from the authorities and was just complying to local laws. A Reporters Without Borders post reported that 'Yahoo! certainly knew it was helping to arrest political dissidents and journalists, not just ordinary criminals'."
[+] Yahoo Helps Jail Chinese Writer 493 comments
An anonymous reader writes "Internet giant Yahoo has been accused of supplying information to China which led to the jailing of journalist Shi Tao for "divulging state secrets". "
[+] Politics: Yahoo Defends Itself On China Allegations 110 comments
Vitaly Friedman writes "Yahoo defends its policies in China as doing more good than harm, even as multiple dissidents have been jailed based on Yahoo Mail evidence. From the article: 'Yahoo continues to defend itself against charges that its Chinese operations have been responsible for the jailing of multiple dissidents. Multiple reports have surfaced which tie Yahoo Mail to various Chinese court cases that have ended in imprisonment for writers with politically unpopular opinions.'"
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.

Yahoo! Allegedly Helps Beijing Arrest a Third Reporter 50 Comments More | Login /

 Full
 Abbreviated
 Hidden
More | Login
Keybindings Beta
Q W E
A S D
Loading ... Please wait.
  • Privacy Policy? What Privacy Policy? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by eldavojohn (898314) * <my/.username@@@gmail.com> on Thursday April 20 2006, @08:51AM (#15164364) Homepage Journal
    I read over Yahoo's Privacy Policy [yahoo.com] as these arrests are starting to interest me. If you translated the above url into Chinese, I'm sure that the entry below wouldn't come out in your favor:
    We have physical, electronic, and procedural safeguards that comply with federal regulations to protect personal information about you.
    Indeed, I see plenty of copyright but no privacy policy on Yahoo! China [yahoo.com.cn]. Yahoo! will leave that to Alibaba.

    Because these 'safeguards' will work both ways. They protect you but they also identify you by your access information (and worse) machine IP address stored in server logs. "Federal Regulations" here in the states means your identity should be protected (but we've all seen that start to ebb) while in China it probably means just the opposite. There, the government is a government 'of the people' which means it has a right to all information and property of the people. Without arguing against too much Marx & Engels here, I'm just going to say that it's not aligned too closely with my beliefs of a government's limitations.

    As Reporters without Borders states, the solution is obvious: move your servers to a country where "federal regulations" protects rather than ousts the end user. Yes, it's going to be slightly more expensive for Yahoo to host it out of the United States and there will be more network load for the internet. This would most certainly be a slap in the face to the Chinese government, however. Not as bad as moving the servers to Taiwan but still bad. I think that we should all watch this quite closely. If Yahoo moves the servers, then they are concerned about the Chinese citizens who want better human rights. If they leave them there and continue to allow the Chinese government to mine their servers ... well, perhaps they should change this page [yahoo.com] from "Consumer Protection" to "Mao's Red Server of the People's Republic."

    Honestly, the Yahoo! logo is colored red. It's missing a star or maybe a hammer and sickle ... but they're almost there.

    Have search engines become government whipping boys? Will Google kneel before the Bush administration while Yahoo! raises the population of the gulags?
    • Yahoo is not very likely to move their servers though. If they were to move the servers out of china to prevent this sort of thing, then the Chinese Government will just block all business from Yahoo.
      The and I am sure the Chinese Government is willing to
    • by aussersterne (212916) on Thursday April 20 2006, @09:08AM (#15164508) Homepage
      Hammer? Sickle? Yahoo is doing this thanks to a love for money. Me things you have your signals crossed, it's not the hammer and sickle that are creeping into their logo, but rather its opposite, the almighty dollar.
      [ Parent ]
      • Me things you have your signals crossed, it's not the hammer and sickle that are creeping into their logo, but rather its opposite, the almighty dollar.

        A little of both. Desire for money justifies (not really but for Yahoo!) compliance with the hammer a

        • Ouch. Typical American ignorant arrogance.

          I have a considerable amount of exposure to people in the PRC, and here is some good news for you: nobody there is seeing American companies as bearers of freedom. Nobody is expecting American companies to do that.
    • Here in Beijing expat reporters have their knickers in a twist about Yahoo (HK), Jiang Lijun and Li Yibing. I have some sympathy for their position but, really, you have to apply a bit of common-sense and objectivity to this. The underlying sentiment, if
    • Have search engines become government whipping boys?

      It is a known phenomenon that when companies become large and influential enough in an important sphere, they essentially become branches of government.

      Look at Boeing, AT&T, MicroSoft, ExxonMobil, Loc
  • by TripMaster Monkey (862126) * on Thursday April 20 2006, @08:52AM (#15164369)

    Companies exist to make money. Period. Reporters Without Borders can plead with Yahoo! to end their collaboration with the PRC all they like, but as long as China has that big juicy carrot of marketshare dangling in front of Yahoo!'s nose, Yahoo! will do whatever the PRC wants.

    One cannot expect Yahoo! to turn away from such a lucrative market any more than one can expect a scorpion not to sting. It's what they do.
    • That's where Congress and the President have to step in. They have the authority to set foreign policy. Currently, the policy is to encourage trade with China. They can shut down China quickly by threatening to remove the favored trading status. "Do no
      • by AndersOSU (873247) on Thursday April 20 2006, @09:31AM (#15164701)
        Yeah, only China has us by the economic balls. If push comes to shove China will start to cash in some of the trillions of US debt that it is sitting on, the dollar will plummet and the economy will generally do some very bad things.

        The only possible responses are to sit there and take it, or launch a military counter strike, Does anyone really think there is an invasion plan for China that doesn't involve nuclear wepons?

        The US is in no position to push China around, in spite of the massive superiority complex we've been cultivating for the past 175 years.
        [ Parent ]
        • No, we really have each other by the balls. China can induce inflation in our economy by dumping our cash. The US on the other hand takes in a huge amount of Chinese exports. If the US was to suddenly refuse to buy from China, China would be severely
          • Re:And that's not all (Score:3, Insightful)

            Slowing down shipments might happen, but blockading Taiwan would be a military action, and it would be more effective and less risky to attack us economically, and let us flex the military muscle first.

            A slowly escalating conflict would be in China's favor
          • Yes, I think that the relationship between China and the U.S. is more one of codependence than anything else; it's two countries 69-ing each other, if we must continue the sex analogy. Both of us have the other by the balls. China has a whole lot of paper
    • by illumin8 (148082) on Thursday April 20 2006, @09:00AM (#15164441) Journal
      From TFA:

      In a paragraph headed "physical and written evidence", it says that a "declaration" dated 25 September 2002 had been found in the email draft folder, without specifying if this information had been provided by the California-based company. The access code could also have been provided by Li Yibing, who is suspected of having been a police informer in the case.


      Has anyone stopped to think that Reporters without Borders might be blowing this out of proportion? I'm definitely against the previous Yahoo shenanigans, however, it's extremely likely that the informant just handed over his password to the Chinese government, who logged in on their own without any Yahoo knowledge. Of course, the way the chinese legal system works, we will probably never know if it was Yahoo that provided the information or the informant.
      [ Parent ]
    • One cannot expect Yahoo! to turn away from such a lucrative market any more than one can expect a scorpion not to sting. It's what they do.

      You're quite right (and using a scorpion as an example is a great one - as neither a scorpion nor a company are capab

      • 'Criticised' is a rather ambiguous term...to clarify the issue, I believe some clearer terms are required.

        A company, like a scorpion, is by design incapable of understanding morality, and so cannot be held responsible for conducting business in an amoral m

    • One cannot expect Yahoo! to turn away from such a lucrative market any more than one can expect a scorpion not to sting.

      As business you're right, Yahoo! cannot be expected to turn away from such a lucrative market. However, as a group of human beings who m
      • I was just going to say the same thing.

        Corporations are obligated to make money, though not through any means possible. They also have a moral and ethical standard to which they are obliged, yet a lot choose to ignore them whenever the mighty dollar is
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Maybe for unrestrained capitalism, but we certainly don't have to adhere to that. Frankly it turns my stomach that people would be so complicit just for the sake of dollars. I was just about as "touched" by the search engine companies' testimonies in front
    • by Anonymous Coward
      That is the worst sort of fallacy ever proposed and on slashdot it seems to always appear whenever corporations do anything. People exist to procreate but I don't have license to go kill everyone else who might take a potential mate of mine. Corporations s
    • Indeed, and customers have a right to choose which companies they do business with. When Yahoo! operates in China, it should comply with Chinese law, no matter how evil it is. It is clear to us that Yahoo!'s Chinese customers prefer their service to no s

      • > So why do the people of the US care so much about lack of rights for the people
        > of China -- what about the Freedom of the Press and Due Process rights of Chinese
        > people in the US?

        Actually, you could s/Chinese//. I'm sure the Chinese people in
    • Indeed. It's a huge pity that US companies were never more willing to put their shareholders' interests above the country's narrow national interest to assist the Soviet Union in improving its controls over its citizens freedom of thought and expression. T
  • And... (Score:5, Insightful)

    And we give Google shit for being in China? Although, after they've set their stuff up in China, can we expect them to argue when the government demands something?
    • Re:And... (Score:3, Insightful)

      Funny thing is, that MSN and Yahoo cooperate fully with the chinese and all govs. Google does not. They appear to not send info the chinese gov. any more than they do to the american gov. OTH, both MSN and Yahoo fully "cooperate" with the gov. in the same
  • Blind eyes (Score:5, Insightful)

    by BadAnalogyGuy (945258) <BadAnalogyGuy@gmail.com> on Thursday April 20 2006, @08:56AM (#15164400)
    The blind eyes being turned here are the eyes of Congress and the American government. So willing are we to have our cheap plastic home appliances that we refuse to stand up to government-sponsored persecution of freedom. The Chinese market is huge and the opportunities are boundless, but theirs is a government which does not value what we claim to value. In fact, it is questionable that we even value what we claim to value anymore.

    This bright shining city on the hill is now as bad as any Chamberlain or Frog. Unwilling to stand up to evil when it arises, and quick to appease enemies in the name of free trade.

    Free trade without political freedom is not free.
      • Re:Blind eyes (Score:3, Interesting)

        You counter-revolutionary capitalist running-dog! How dare you try to undermine the people's revolution in China by accusing them of being Capitalist!? You are obviously a capitalist agent, trying to create an insurgency to destroy the work of the great ch
  • Boycot Yahoo (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Midnight Thunder (17205) on Thursday April 20 2006, @08:56AM (#15164401) Homepage Journal
    Maybe its time we started boycotting Yahoo? This would mean amongst other things replacing people replacing own their Geocities pages with a boycot message.
    • Maybe its time we started boycotting Yahoo? This would mean amongst other things replacing people replacing own their Geocities pages with a boycot message.

      I hate to say it, but Yahoo is asking for a lot more than a boycot. When you start imprisioning an

  • Just weeks ago I commented on a slashdot story about Google censoring Chinnese search results. My opinion then was that Google was just "complying with local laws".

    Someone replied asking if it did not mattered if the country laws where broken to what I ans
  • It's not Yahoo's Job. (Score:2, Insightful)

    It isn't Yahoo's job to change the political climate in China, no more than it is Googles. Change in China will occur once the people demand it and other nations (not companies) apply pressure and lend support.

    http://religiousfreaks.com/ [religiousfreaks.com]
    • True (Score:5, Insightful)

      by RedHatLinux (453603) on Thursday April 20 2006, @09:08AM (#15164505) Homepage
      but Yahoo should try and avoid whoring itself out to one of the worse regime on the planet. Just as a common courtesy.
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:True (Score:3, Insightful)

        Those reporters broke the law in China, if Yahoo is to do business there they must also play by the local laws. The only other option is to stop doing business in China. If you are going to demand they boycott the Chinese market over human rights why stop
    • I agree, it's not Yahoo's job to change how the Chinese government operates. However, it's definitely not Yahoo's job to assist the Chinese government in persecuting people. Your comment is essentially irrelevant. Likewise, it's not Yahoo's job to clean up
  • Maybe I am cynical, but (Score:4, Insightful)

    by gregarican (694358) on Thursday April 20 2006, @09:01AM (#15164452) Homepage
    If I was living in China and was promoting something that the strict, heavy-handed government there had declared illegal (even something as basic to most Western cultures as democracy and free speech) I certainly wouldn't be using Yahoo! Mail to communicate.

    Trafficing marijuana is likewise illegal here in the U.S. Sure some folks claim its a naturally growing plant that is one of God's creations. Nevertheless if I was corresponding back and forth with all of my contacts in Mexico I sure as hell wouldn't be doing it through GMail.

  • Simply for the fact that in order for China to change they must be brought into the world arena. The more you are in the world arena, the harder it is to get away with this kind of behavior.

    Remember that it was not that many years ago that you would hav
    • Simply for the fact that in order for China to change they must be brought into the world arena. The more you are in the world arena, the harder it is to get away with this kind of behavior.

      But they ARE in the world arena, and they ARE getting away with it
  • Yahoo is operating a business in China so it is bound to act in accordance with Chinese laws. You cannot simply decide you do not agree with a countries law and you are going to ignore them.

    Obviously there is an ethical argument that maybe Yahoo should not
  • this IS big news (Score:3, Funny)

    by JeanBaptiste (537955) on Thursday April 20 2006, @09:05AM (#15164486)
    I had no idea people still use Yahoo

  • "Hmmm...Yahoo has previously turned over information about my fellow dissidents. I wonder what service I should use for e-mail, or if I should encrypt the content of the e-mails I send. Nahhhh...too much trouble. Hey, Li, someone's knocking really hard
  • What's wrong with Slashdotters? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Internet Ronin (919897) <internet@ronin.gmail@com> on Thursday April 20 2006, @09:08AM (#15164515)
    Why is it that every time this issue comes up someone pops up with a supposed 'realistic worldview' defense of these companies?

    Everytime I read through another instance of China putting the kibosh on freedom and liberty, people here start picking up the "businesses make money, China has money, therefore businesses will screw anyone and everyone to make money" line of reasoning? Businesses aren't some unnatural entity that sprang forth, they are a collection of man-power, and resources, working towards a common goal. There is a *person* somewhere, saying "Toss the guy to the Chinese authority."

    The more people blindly accept the justification that "that's just how it is, I can't change anything," the less you ACTUALLY can change things. Don't give your power away to multi-national corporations, don't give it away to the goverment.

    I guess I just don't see what your policy advocacy says. Do we let Yahoo! off the hook for hosing people? Are you saying this just isn't newsworthy? That too much of your valuable time has been wasted or learning that Yahoo! is pulling some shady deals in China? Just let them get away with it, and stop talking about it because we're wasting our breath?

    Can't people speak out against a perceived injustice and have it mean more than a wasted breath? Sheesh, usually I'm considered the cynically one, but next to the average Slashdotter, I'm dancing in the land of fairies and make-believe and butterflies and rainbows.

    Quit shrugging your shoulders about a problem as fundamentally restrictive as this. The more people speak, the more can be done.
  • Standard Interview Question (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward
    Q: What's your favorite search engine, and why?

    I once had a prospective employee answer Yahoo! I should have known that she was a bad apple just from that answer, but she was otherwise qualified so I hired her. What a big mistake. Turns out that she wasn'
  • China has laws. They will enforce those laws in their own country. If a company does business there they expect that company to follow the regulations / laws.

    So what happens when the government requests information? It is given. Here we can appeal ther
  • We need this FCPA-2 (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mi (197448) <mi+slashdot@aldan.algebra.com> on Thursday April 20 2006, @09:27AM (#15164666) Homepage
    I said this last time, China vs. Yahoo! (and Google) came up, I'll say it again.

    Just as the FCPA [wikipedia.org] currently prohibits US companies from certain behavior abroad (primarily -- bribing foreign officials) -- FCPA-2.0 should also prohibit the anti-human rights disclosures, like the ones Yahoo! was forced to make.

    It is not going to be easy to make this law, but something is needed to give these companies a backbone and help them weather a foreign government's hostile action. Something like a threat of sanctions against the country demanding an American company's cooperation in an unjust (in USA's view) prosecution. Such sanctions ought to be automatic only requiring a US federal judge's approval.

    I'll be very glad to see such a law condemned as "imperialist" and US accused of "twisting" the tyrants' arms with it.

  • The big problem with Yahoo! in China (Score:5, Insightful)

    by prostoalex (308614) on Thursday April 20 2006, @09:58AM (#15164924) Homepage Journal
    Yahoo! is never notified by the Chinese government regarding the nature of crimes of the subpoenaed account. In any country the criminal law states that the organization (be it commercial, government or non-profit) has to provide the required documents if a court-issued subpoena comes in.

    When Chinese authorities come and ask for personal information on an account suspected of criminal activity, Yahoo! doesn't know whether the suspect:

    1) raped kids and made profit from child pornography
    2) disagreed with the Communist Party of China
    3) was a serial killer who concentrated on women and cute puppies

    Believe it or not, Chinese government doesn't actually clarify what they want the data for and how it will be used.
  • by Asgorath (806125) on Thursday April 20 2006, @04:26PM (#15168622) Homepage
    I must say I am a bit disappointed by most comments found here. I had expected smarter replies basically. It seems the mighty dollar overrules any sense of morality or interests in human rights.

    Comments about if you want to do business there you need to abide to their laws. Correct... so by doing so, you have decided money is more important then human rights. And in my eyes you are wrong. It's not a very solid defence really for Yahoo!. It basically says making a profit is more worthwhile then human rights. Because China is an economic powerhouse it has the rights to do whatever it wants.

    I guess those posters here also had no problems with companies like IBM supporting the Nazi's and doing business with the Nazi's when the US was wat war with Germany? Because hey, if you want to do business there, you need to accept their laws and as such you become absolved of any blame.

    So perhaps do business there, as long as you can do it on your own terms, those that respect human rights and decent moral values (don't tell me the mass executions and torture are just another set of moral values we should respect and it's all "culture"). China is not really a communist country, it's just a good old fashioned dictatorship, with the most executions of any country in the world almost. Who torture their prisoners and who do imprison people for simply opposing the government. When it's some minor (compared to China) dictator like Saddam we all cry havoc, when that dictatorship temps us with money it all becomes alright.

    So if your wife, husband (woops this is slashdot.. sorry wife's and husbands? :P), brother, sister, friend suddenly disappears, gets tortured (oh sorry, I mean re-educated according to "traditional" and "cultural" values) and perhaps murdered due to Yahoo! giving their details to an oppressive government you will still defend the mighty dollar over human rights? It's so bloody easy when it doesn't affect you directly. I wonder what the people being tortured right now would think about such high and mighty statements.
    • They're not thinking about the quash of free speech, they're thinking of ways to get access to the world's largest consumer base.

      What, china? Also about the world's poorest. They'd be better off concentratting on the US where people earn a hundred times as