Well, we’ve got to hand it to Google-the company’s ‘don’t be evil’ schtick has long worn thin and governments around the globe are already probing its potential monopoly power, but who else would come out swinging against the entire Chinese government and announce an end to its own collaboration in censorship, all while recognizing that it could lose access to the entire Chinese market? And do it in a blog post? This far but no further The extraordinary announcement came this afternoon: Google has had it with China’s pervasive web of censorship and spying, and the company is done censoring its search results in China. The decision wasn’t made in a vacuum, but rather came after years of increasing cyberattacks from the Chinese mainland. A recent, massive infiltration attempt that targeted Google and 20 other tech companies was the final straw. Though Google stops short of naming the Chinese government as the party behind the attacks, the implication is clear. In mid-December, we detected a highly sophisticated and targeted attack on our corporate infrastructure originating from China that resulted in the theft of intellectual property from Google. However, it soon became clear that […]
Wednesday, January 13th, 2010
Furious Google Throws Down Gauntlet To China Over Censorship
Author:
Source: ars technica
Publication Date: 1/12/2010 21:52
Link: Furious Google Throws Down Gauntlet To China Over Censorship
Source: ars technica
Publication Date: 1/12/2010 21:52
Link: Furious Google Throws Down Gauntlet To China Over Censorship
Stephan: China's highly sophisticated attacks on the internet and its illegal acquisition of American intellectual property, developed at great cost and effort, is a far more serious form of terrorism, if less productive of sensoids, than a teenager with a bomb in his underpants, as ghastly as that might have been.
I have great respect for Google for doing this; it serves all of us.