Friday, February 02, 2007

From [IP] Internet groups agree on principles to deal with censor ship (FT)

Wow, this is BIG news for the net.

-----Original Message-----
From: David Farber [mailto:dave@farber.net]
Sent: Friday, February 02, 2007 9:48 AM
To: ip@v2.listbox.com
Subject: [IP] Internet groups agree on principles to deal with censorship (FT)



Begin forwarded message:

From: "Kobrin, Steve" <kobrins@wharton.upenn.edu>
Date: January 19, 2007 8:53:07 AM EST
To: dave@farber.net
Subject: Internet groups agree on principles to deal with censorship 
(FT)

Financial Times Internet groups respond to China critics
By Jonathan Birchall in New York and Richard Waters in San Francisco

Published: January 18 2007 20:00 | Last updated: January 18 2007 20:00

Google, Yahoo, Microsoft and Vodafone have announced an agreement 
with human rights groups, internet freedom activists and others to 
establish a set of principles covering how they deal with censorship 
and other restrictions that could harm human rights in China and 
elsewhere.

The move comes in the wake of public criticism of big US online 
companies last year over their activities in China. It echoes other 
voluntary "multi-stakeholder" initiatives that have emerged in recent 
years in response to public protest, covering issues such as the use 
of local security forces by oil and mining companies, and conditions 
in the clothing and footwear supply chains.

The four companies have agreed to work with non-governmental 
organisations to "seek solutions to the free expression and privacy 
challenges faced by technology and communications companies doing 
business internationally", according to a statement on Thursday.

A senior executive at one of the companies warned that a voluntary 
code of practice was unlikely to have much practical effect.

"The fantasy is, we're all going to say we're going to stop 
censorship," the executive said. "The issue is not whether we're 
doing this in good faith, the question is, what's the leverage?"

However, an official at one of the human rights groups involved said 
that by adopting a common front and making issues such as censorship 
a subject of their broader negotiations with foreign governments, the 
companies might succeed in rolling back some censorship of their web 
search engines.

The response of the US companies involved also comes against the 
background of an effort to promote online freedom regulations in 
Congress. Chris Smith, a Democratic member of the House of 
Representatives, held hearings in Washington on such freedom issues 
last year.

This month he reintroduced his Global Online Freedom Act, which would 
set minimum standards for internet companies, including that search 
engines should not be located in "internet restricting" countries and 
that search engines cannot alter or filter the results of their 
searches at the behest of governments.

The initiative follows criticism of Google over its decision last 
year to set up a separate Chinese-language search engine that 
censored results for sensitive topics such as human rights and Tibet.

Yahoo has also been criticised by human rights groups including 
Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch over its decision to 
hand over e-mail account data to the Chinese government that has led 
to the imprisonment of "cyber dissidents".

Microsoft has also faced criticism over censoring social sites in China.

Cisco, which joined Google, Yahoo and Microsoft before Congress last 
year over its record in China, has not joined the initiative.

Vodafone, the European telecommunications company, is actively 
involved in a range of corporate social responsibility issues, and 
has not faced criticism over internet freedom issues.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2007


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