Google slaps down Australia

Is Australia trying to look foolish or do they truly want to look like a bumbling authoritarian state? The Communications Minister, Stephen Conroy, has launched a stinging attack on Google and its credibility in response to the search giant’s campaign against the government’s internet filtering policy. In an interview on ABC Radio last night, Senator…

Is Wikileaks the most important website in the world?

The latest Wikileaks drama: Whistleblower Web site WikiLeaks is planning to release a video that reveals what it’s calling a Pentagon “cover-up” of an incident in which numerous civilians and journalists were murdered in an airstrike, according to a recent media advisory. The video will be released on April 5 at the National Press Club,…

Google helps clarify what web freedom should mean?

Does the web need a bill of rights? Jeff Jarvis writes in the Guardian that Google’s recent move in China is significant: Google’s business strategy is dead simple: the more we use the internet, the more Google makes. If governments are allowed and enabled to restrict freedom on the internet to a lowest common denominator…

Beijing is nervous and insecure and Google has made it worse

Evan Osnos, writing in the New Yorker, laments the rise of a supposed new super-power: As Americans living in China at this moment in its history, many of us have fashioned an image of a country that is moving—in its own shambling pattern of fits and starts—toward something better for itself and the world. Sure,…

Google: we haven’t really shut-down our Chinese business

The New York Times praises Google’s decision to (finally) challenge China’s draconian censorship laws but Google’s David Drummond, the company’s chief legal officer, offers James Fallows at the Atlantic an insider’s view: It may not be quite obvious that this is not really a “shutdown” of either our operations in China or of our mainland…

Iran did not have a Twitter revolution

The BBC World Service has published my following article about the internet in Iran (originally published on BBC Persian last week): The face of murdered Iranian woman Neda Agha Soltan, killed by a bullet in the Iranian capital Tehran, echoed around the world. Like this, the vast majority of iconic images that documented Iran’s disputed…

Google and China, a relationship that ain’t over yet

Not so fast in believing that Google has completely ended its censorship regime in China: Google’s operations and long-term prospects in China were shrouded in confusion , as it emerged that it is still censoring search services for its partners because of contractual obligations. The world’s leading search engine hoped to resolve two months of…

ABC Triple J Hack on Google and China

The news that Google is leaving China is causing headlines around the world. I was interviewed about the ramifications of the decision on yesterday’s current affairs program Hack on ABC’s Triple J:

Google should be praised for taking on China

The decision of Google to essentially withdraw from China is highly significant and a (better late than never) acknowledgement that Beijing treats its citizens with contempt: Google shut down its search service in the Chinese mainland last night after a two-month standoff with Beijing over online freedom and an alleged intrusion by hackers. But Chinese…

A rare example of a web firm saying ‘no’ to China

A positive sign in many ways and shows that not all Western firms will always bow to Beijing’s demands. Of course, the flip argument is that the departure of Google will leave one… less non-Chinese company in the country, a group that may sometimes challenge strict web censorship: Google will today set out plans to close…

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