http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/6966116.stm
8/28/2007 6:59:30 PM
they have no right to do business in china if they will knowingly violate Chinese law. Yahoo did the right thing. Those journalists arrested know their own countries laws and broke them willingly.
8/29/2007 10:38:32 PM
8/29/2007 11:24:54 PM
yeah ok. is that all you have to contribute? What tune will you be singing if a Chinese internet company opened a branch in the US and some of its users posted some anti-American pro terrorism ideology online and the US courts demanded the usernames and ip addresses so they can round them up and ship them off to Camp Delta
8/29/2007 11:41:10 PM
What are you smoking? What does that have to do with anything? It doesn't even make sense. People are free to post "anti-American pro terrorism ideology" from American ips. They do it now. What's your point? What does that have to do with not supporting Yahoo and Google?Yeah, the have no right to do business in China. But they sure as fuck didn't do the right thing. Sorry if I don't condone companies putting profit above freedom of speech. What the fuck was I thinking.
8/29/2007 11:51:55 PM
You know what you oughta do?Start a drum circle.That'll show all those evil corporations!
8/30/2007 12:00:30 AM
^^coming from the Mother Teresa hater? lol I don't know if i can take anything you say seriously but here goes.If you really think you have complete freedom of speech here then you need to remove your blindfold.
8/30/2007 12:05:43 AM
in almost every circumstance, i think "engagement" will always give better results than "isolation". whether it's China, Korea, Iran, Cuba, whoever...so we can either engage china or isolate them.yahoo can either do business with them or not. if they don't, surely someone else will. perhaps a local chinese or an indian or a russian technology company will step up to fill the void that yahoo would leave.if anyone wants to do business with china, in china, they're going to have to play by china's laws.chinese dissidents need to be more careful than using publicly available, unencrypted and unsecure emails to engage in subversive activities. still, it sucks.im glad i'm not chinese.
8/30/2007 1:48:00 AM
8/30/2007 10:23:51 AM
8/30/2007 10:31:35 AM
8/30/2007 11:12:38 AM
8/30/2007 11:46:14 AM
8/30/2007 12:08:45 PM
8/30/2007 1:18:21 PM
This isn't a question about laws. This is an issue about ethics. The right to free speech is not something an American company should be helping a government reduce.
8/30/2007 1:28:39 PM
^Finally a sensible response.It's an ethical dilemma. I actually agree with joe_schmoe, its better to give them some access and engage the country, than to isolate them. They cant operate within China and brazenly defy their laws. All that will accomplish is China deporting the non-citizens, seizing their operations and further implicating their national employees.
8/30/2007 1:38:26 PM
some of you people are well-intentioned but missing the point.Yahoo has to abide by the Chinese govt's laws if they want to do business in China. Yahoo is not in the position to change Chinese laws.Here's an analogy:-- say there's another nation who has businesses that want to provide internet subscription service packages in the U.S. -- this other nation happens to have less-strict laws about what constitutes child porn. -- citizens of this other nation believe very strongly that have the "right" to buy/sell/trade any child pornography deemed "acceptable" by their standards. Now these businesses tells the US Govt, that since it doesn't break *their* laws, that they don't have to give any information to US Law Enforcement about US citizens using their services to engage in the distribution of child porn....They have two options. play by our rules, or GTFO. if they want to play the philosophical high road, then they need to pack their shit up and leave.
8/30/2007 1:43:51 PM
This joe_schmoe dude is so damn right.
8/30/2007 1:45:07 PM
8/30/2007 2:41:29 PM
^ pretty much, unless you do it on a campus network
8/30/2007 2:42:30 PM
8/30/2007 2:47:55 PM
^Right to become intoxicated has nothing to do with free speech
8/30/2007 2:51:18 PM
^i wasn't implying that it had anything to do with free speech. And its not a right to get intoxicated unless you are a dumb college student. its the right to drink what you want when you want.
8/30/2007 2:53:25 PM
8/30/2007 2:53:27 PM