I never got around to that nap, and now it's too late to take one. DOH! I have NOT been productive today (apart from the gym, class, food shopping, and wrapping ebay items) so i feel a little guilty now. I'm so tiiiiiiired, though.
Anyway, this is important. Read on
(
Read more... )
Comments 24
Personally, I think they shouldn't have done it, but I can see why they did.
Reply
Reply
Reply
And your comment made perfect sense. No worries. ;p
Reply
That's what *I'd* do, but then I've never let any considerations for legality, ethics, honesty or anything else stand in the way of me doing what I consider the right thing.
Reply
Reply
Well, from my POV, my responsibility to do the right thing overpowers any responsibility to the shareholders, laws or nations. If my doing the right thing causes the company to go bust, so be it. If it causes an international incident, so be it. If I have the flagrantly break the law to do it, I will.
I believe that not only is breaking unjust laws acceptable, I believe it's our moral responsibility to do so. Given the opportunity as head of Google, I would openly screw China on the deal, boast about it, and use it force an international incident that would compel the world to actually *act* on these horrible human rights abuses.
Deep down, I really am Chaotic Good.
Reply
Reply
Singapore demonstrates that censorship and party dictatorship does not have to lead to an oppressed society; China is allowed to get away with the violations they have, and we citizens of the world allow them to; China assumes Tibet is a province, and not a true country. They do it with Taiwan as well. The U.N. and other nations allow them to do this without effective resistance.
The better idea may be to sever all network connections to China except for a single 1200 bps dial-up line.
Reply
I'm "blaming" (more like "questioning their moral integrity") Google for supporting something that is actively detrimental to another country; not for China's policy itself. That IS what I try to take up with my government (fat lot of good it's ever done, though).
It's just frustrating for me because I don't know what to do now. Do I keep using Google, or turn a blind eye?
Reply
Reply
I just love me some Tibet. ;_;
Reply
The problem is that China already uses a firewall to block out anything it's government doesn't agree with. This includes results from other google sites. So whether or not google agreed to censor itself is not a huge issue, as the Chinese government was doing it already.
Though I am dissappointed in them. Before Chinese citizens had a chance of maybe finding something about issues, such as China's occupation of Tibet. But what effect would boycotting google have?
Reply
Exactly. I'm pretty sure it's not going to change anything, but complacency is not something I enjoy.
Reply
1) google is making a rat's breakfast of the filter, its case sensitive, easily bypassed by spelling mistakes and so on. Its kinda TOO sloppy to be serious
2)The US navy helped fund a programme called "tor". some hackers (the good guys) even made a version of firefox with it built in (torpark) and a whole anonymous OS (can't remember what its called). Any savvy privacy loving chinese citizen would and should use these.
personally, i think google is giving the chinese government lip service; i mean they're the ONLY search engine that refused to give the american government logs of searchs. Yahoo TURNED IN a pair of chinese journalists to the chinese government... as things are, google are still reasonably nice guys from a technophile's point of view at least.
Faileas Grey
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
Leave a comment