Microsoft Changes Blog Censoring Policies 153
Lam1969 writes "Microsoft attorney Brad Smith says that the company has a new policy to deal with a foreign government's request that alleges posted material violates its laws. The policy was apparently developed after Microsoft's own employees complained after a Chinese blogger hosted by Microsoft was censored. From the article 'Smith said Microsoft will only remove blogs when given proper legal notice, and even then, will only block access to that material within the country where it is deemed unlawful. The site will still be viewable from outside the country, he said.'"
Nothing for you to see here. Please move along. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Nothing for you to see here. Please move along. (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The mods here have NO sense of humor. (Score:2)
Re:The mods here have NO sense of humor. (Score:3, Insightful)
Be happy, now it's +5 funny. Personally, I'd have modded it "redundant", as this exact post is made every time somethng related to censorship is posted. Maybe a couple of years ago it was "subtle and beautiful", now it's on the same level as "Hot grits", "Imagine a Beowulf cluster", etc. Humour requires at least a touch of novelty.
Re: originality. (Score:2)
Also, at the time of the post it wasn't (too) redundant
Well, no one seems to have modded it "off topic", or "redundant".
Currently:
50% Funny
20% Overrated
10% Troll
But I personally do think that "redundant" is applicable for a post that lacks any originality. Mod justice is only approximate, I've had posts that were modded down to 0 as "overrated" when thare were no positive mods at all. And numerous "troll" mods for posts that just expressed an honest op
Ha! (Score:5, Insightful)
Way to go MS!
--LWM
Re:Ha! (Score:2)
Re:Ha! (Score:2)
Making illegal content available in a country can make you liable in all manner of ways even if the content if physically in another country.
Though blocking vs. disclaimers about "not allowed to be vievewed in" are a totally different discussion.
Re:Ha! (Score:2)
Google unrealistically expects that the Chinese government won't notice and get back to them about that?
Microsoft realistically expects that the Chinese government is too smart to let that get by for long so they are implementing a solution with greater viability?
Re:Child porn... policy reversal. (Score:2)
We're talking about things which are legal in the country they host from, the USA. I imagine that warez, mp3s, etc. would also violate the ToS and would be removed as content.
"Information wants to be free" (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:"Information wants to be free" (Score:2)
> You know that statement is true when even Microsoft goes out > of their way to keep speech protected and free. Way to be, Microsoft.
...except that, according the article, Microsoft would have done exactly the same thing with the blog in question under this new policy:
Oh yeah? Well...... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Oh yeah? Well...... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Oh yeah? Well...... (Score:1, Funny)
Ha2! (Score:3, Funny)
--LWM
Re:Oh yeah? Well...... (Score:2)
Re:Oh yeah? Well...... (Score:1)
Re:Oh yeah? Well...... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Oh yeah? Well...... (Score:2, Insightful)
MS is just too big to paint the entire company one color;
Actually... (Score:4, Funny)
2. Search using google (with mispelled words) to find your blog.
3. Read!!
Isn't it nice when everyone's working together?
Re:Oh yeah? Well...... (Score:3)
Sigh ... public manipulation 101.
They're only making it look like they're doing the right thing - relative to what they were doing for a short time. But hang on, they're still censoring. This is just a press release saying "we'll censor slightly less stringently than we used to". But they're still censoring at least as much as everyone else is - they're now doing exactly what everyone was saying "Google is evil" for just a week or two ago. And yet everyone falls for it and goes "wow look Microsoft is doing
Microsoft: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Microsoft: (Score:1)
Re:Microsoft: (Score:2, Funny)
Google: Do no evil.*
*not available in China
Excellent Step (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Excellent Step (Score:2, Informative)
I'd bet the censored material was a clear violation of article 51 [unibe.ch] of the constitution.
Re:Excellent Step (Score:2)
I'm not necessarily looking to start a revolution, but abuses can be
Re:Excellent Step (Score:2)
Saddam's Iraq was. The US was (Civil War). Successful revolutions often have 3rd party support, the US Revolutionary War for example.
Re:Excellent Step (Score:2)
Why is it Microsoft's job to do this? I think it would be better for the world if China was more democratic, but I just don't think it's corporations duty to do this. Corporations have a responsibility to their community, but that doesn't include breaking the law of foriegn lands. In China, there's a lot less restriction around using other people's intelectual property than in the US (dvd's cost about $1 for instance).
Re:Excellent Step (Score:2)
This is indeed a step forward. Good for Microsoft.
Re:Excellent Step (Score:2)
Re:Excellent Step (Score:2)
That's not the whole story. The public reaction to the DOJ subpoenas two weeks ago proves that customers expect companies to consider their actions from more than a financial perspective. Google won geek points by refusing to comply, and they also demonstrated that a government order doesn't need to be the "end of story."
Disclaimer: I'm not a Google fanboy. I'm merely applauding their actions in this one, specific,
Re:Excellent Step (Score:2)
Re:Excellent Step (Score:2)
Re:Excellent Step (Score:2)
Re:Excellent Step (Score:2)
Re:Excellent Step (Score:2)
Re:Excellent Step (Score:2)
"You have the freedom of speech"
"You have the freedom to practise whichever religion you want"
"Except where it does against the interests of the state."
Bravo. Now what about Google? (Score:2)
Now consider this a hint to Google about avoiding evil...
--dave
No change detected. (Score:2)
The right thing to do is nothing.
Ow! (Score:2, Funny)
Now I'm really confused whom to hate.
Help me?
Re:Ow! (Score:2)
"Sticking it to censorship"? (Score:2)
They're just restricting the censorship to requests from one country.
Just like Google.
Re:"Sticking it to censorship"? (Score:2)
Image results for "tiananmen square"... you'll notice very different results even though both requests originate in the US.
http://images.google.com/images?q=tiananmen+square &hl=en&btnG=Search+Images [google.com]
http://images.google.cn/images?svnum=10&hl=zh-CN&l r=&cr=countryCN&q=tiananmen+square&btnG=%E6%90%9C% E7%B4%A2 [google.cn]
Re:"Sticking it to censorship"? (Score:2)
Re:"Sticking it to censorship"? (Score:2)
If that was the case, all you europeans get off del.icio.us ASAP!
Re:"Sticking it to censorship"? (Score:2)
If you are outside China, you have access to google.com as well as google.cn. So far as I know, google is not blocking anyone from reaching google.com and forcing them to view google.cn.
So... the censorship that restricts people from receiving full search results from Google is based on the country of residence... not the domain: if you are at a site inside the Great Firewall
Re:Ow! (Score:2)
Most of the hatred of MS is irrational, why introduce rationality now?
Re:Ow! (Score:2)
Uh, they're both still doing exactly the same things. So yes, please do feel free to be consistent and either hate both or be OK with both.
"Sticking it to censorship"? Puh-lease, are you that easily fooled by a press release? They're still censoring at least as much as Google is.
Re:Ow! (Score:2)
Capitalism also brings you your computer, the internet, the clothes you are wearing, or at least I hope you are wearing as you read this,
Re:Ow! (Score:2)
Actually, he's wrong. Capitalism is a political system.
No, capitalism is an economic system. Whoever is teaching you politics is either (a) a fool or (b) wise and in the business of manipulating fools.
capitalism
An economic system in which the means of production and distribution are privately or corporately owned and development is proportionate to
Google (Score:2, Insightful)
Do no evil. The concept of evil changes with time, sometimes quite rapidly.
In other news... (Score:3, Funny)
Say what you will about MS... (Score:4, Insightful)
FTFB: But, the behavior of my company in this instance is not right.
Either Scoble is very important to MS, or MS tolerates that from their employees. Beleive it or not, I've been at companies that would NOT have tolerated that kind of outspokeness from one of their employees. Or, Scoble, is now looking for a job.
Re:Say what you will about MS... (Score:2, Interesting)
/nudges Google (Score:3, Insightful)
"sexual" content (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:"sexual" content (Score:1)
Unless you misspelt it and meant Cheddar?
Re:"sexual" content (Score:2)
( From http://spaces.msn.com/coc.aspx [msn.com] )
Re:"sexual" content (Score:2)
Re:"sexual" content (Score:2)
Re:"sexual" content (Score:2)
Re:"sexual" content (Score:2)
Unfortunately (Score:1)
it is rather simple, either MS and Google comply, or they are not welcome in China.
and for those of you who think you would choose to be moral and not support censorship, I would love to see how fast you turn on those convictions if someone pulled up with a dumptruck of money.
Re:Unfortunately (Score:1)
And check out the "Google In Damage Control [interneh.com]" story here, everything's changing.
Re:Unfortunately (Score:1)
Re:Unfortunately (Score:1)
Re:Unfortunately (Score:1)
So to assume that all law-biding citizens automatically qualify as good citizens is a big assumption.
Law has nothing to do with good and evil.
Google had a choice of breaking the law and be good, or abiding the law and be evil.
Re:Unfortunately (Score:2)
then
Re:Unfortunately (Score:1)
I'm revolted by the very suggestion. Not everyone is prepared to sell their principles for a price. If it were as simple as Microsoft and Google agreeing to cencorship policies for the purposes of profit, then it would be clear cut, their actions would be completely unacceptable to just about every civilised human being I know.
Except it's not quite that simple. It's a choice between allowing acce
Re:Unfortunately (Score:2, Interesting)
Stop for a second and really, really think about it. Forget all the money associated with any particular decision. Then, ask yourself, is Google doing something immoral? It's a very tricky question. Here's how I feel about it: A.1 Google does not have the leverage in China to change China's free speech policy. A.2 Reg
useful (Score:1, Interesting)
ooh thats useful. someone blocks your site, then you have to travel to another country to update it.
Money = Freedom? (Score:1)
That's just good news for everyone (even Microsoft haters).
this is really bad for china... (Score:3, Interesting)
Now someone can post a blog/whatever with potential bad info about things happening in china, and no one in china can see it. BUT, the rest of the world will see it in all its glory, uncensored. Great for the revolutionaries, good for the rest of the world, bad for china, et al.
It's like the head in the sand. China won't see it, and thus denies it exists. But the rest of the world will see it just fine.
If this holds, expect to see even more posts about chinese atrocities from internal subversives, because now they won't be hidden from the outside world.
Minor but important correction (Score:3, Insightful)
"China won't officially see it,..."
Re:this is really bad for china... (Score:2)
A very important distinction.
Let the governments censor their own crap! (Score:3, Insightful)
Sounds like they want to have their noodles and eat'm too.
Re:Let the governments censor their own crap! (Score:1)
Can someone explain... (Score:4, Insightful)
Microsoft took a blog down. They got flamed about it. They changed their policies so they'd only "take blogs down" for the country that requested it. The blog in question would still have been censored if the current policy was in effect. Result: Microsoft is applying special filters for China.
Which is exactly what Google is doing.
How is this good when Microsoft does it, and evil when Google does it?
I mean, people aren't going "well, Microsoft's expected to be evil, so this is par for the course", people are actually arguing that this is "not evil". It's less evil than blocking sites/searches that the Chinese government requested everywhere, perhaps, but Google wasn't doing that and nobody ever suggested that they might... and Microsoft was.
Re:Can someone explain... (Score:2, Insightful)
It's the difference between a "utopian" society that's only that way because all dissidents are silenced, and a "utopian" society that is recognized by others to be the oppressive regime it is, even if the people there don't.
Re:Can someone explain... (Score:2)
Can you try again in simple, direct, clear and explicit terms and explain why the same action is good if Microsoft does it but bad if Google does it...?
Re:Can someone explain... (Score:2)
I'm not asking "why is selectively filtering information to different countries bad?"
I'm asking "why is this good when Microsoft does it, and bad when Google does it?"
Re:Can someone explain... (Score:2)
Google has a slogan "Do No Evil" yet when put to the test, as in the recent China episode, we saw that "evil" is very much a gray area to them.
Now Microsoft, while taking a similar implementation to Google, but has decided to make it an actual written policy on how they will handle these situations. That's the big difference. Google (as far as I know) has no written policy to cover this. And seeing as MS is the first large tech company to have such a policy, theref
Re:Can someone explain... (Score:2)
I still don't get it.
If censoring the view from China is wrong, then making that an official policy and setting a precedent that censoring the view prom China is appropriate can't possibly be good.
Please, don't keep telling me that Google is being evil. Explain why Microsoft's actions are somehow not also evil.
Re:Can someone explain... (Score:2)
Aha! Thank you, I asked that question earlier (where is google.cn located) and got no response.
This is really beginning to sound like the people who got all gaga about Microsoft releasing limited parts of their source code under NDA and went off wibbling about "open source Windows".
Re:Can someone explain... (Score:2)
I understand that viewpoint, but what I'm talking about are the many many postings arguing that Google should somehow learn something from Microsoft here. And they don't seem to be made in the vein of honest cynical bastardry, either.
Not only that, but I'm slightly less inclined to s
Re:Can someone explain... (Score:2)
Re:Can someone explain... (Score:2)
Re:Can someone explain... (Score:2)
Realistically speaking, I doubt if you could say that Google is censoring the internet, seeing that you can, as a matter of fact, search on Google.com from within China, even if your search results might be blocked. To me, Google is just responding to its apparent committments to Chinese law, while at the same time, not quite censoring itself. This is a crucial point, I don't know if Ame
Re:Can someone explain... (Score:2)
I had no idea they were that powerful. No wonder thay have an insane market cap.
Oooh! Take THAT Google!! sez Bill (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Meanwhile, back at the ranch... (Score:2, Informative)
"MSFT: Our DRM licensing is there to eliminate hobbyists and little guys"
http://www.boingboing.net/2006/01/30/msft_our_drm
Google/Russian Culture Version of Evil (Score:4, Interesting)
So, when Google says don't be evil, they mean it sincerely. They just don't mean what us Americans mean.
Also, keep in mind that the US government is doing nothing, repeat, nothing, to prevent foreign governments from pressuring US based companies into censorship. If you want there to be no censorship by China, then pass a law stating that any company that censors material based on the request of a foreign government which is not also censorable under US law may not do business in the US.
If you aren't willing to pass such a law, which will have a price, then don't complain about Google.
Please consider the enormous strategic importance of the Chinese market for Google. China is growing FAST. Also consider that Google most likely does not consider themselves to be irreplaceable for China, and that there is really not a lot they can do (unless the US Government pushes back against China in this culture war). Then consider one last time that in Russian culture this is just not evil.
This is a job for the US Government, not Google or Microsoft. Oh dear. Sigh.:-/
Re:Google/Russian Culture Version of Evil (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Google/Russian Culture Version of Evil (Score:2)
The reason Putin can censor is that the only people who really care are talkers not doers.
Go out and shoot him, and I will not only apologize, I will spend time living there again. I went there thinking that democracy was going to win --- I did not expect to be told stories that the KGB had secretly funded Yeltsin, and
Re:Google/Russian Culture Version of Evil (Score:2)
And you don't feel that after being part of the soviet union for ~70 years Russia might possibly have absorbed a bit of its culture?
Re:American Values (Score:2)
It's like people have a need to "reward" Microsoft for making any kind of positive steps, however reluctant or stumbling. Which is all very well from a behaviouralist perspective but it's really distorting the