Bill censors a Chinese blogger

by Mathew on January 3, 2006 · View Comments

Blogging is more than just something that geeks with a lot of time on their hands do for fun. In countries like China, blogs are one of the few ways dissidents can try to exercise a little freedom of speech — something we in the West take for granted. In that sense, they are a little like the “samizdat” newsletters that were photocopied and handed around in the USSR under Stalin.

That’s why it’s so depressing to see a company like Microsoft’s MSN censoring a dissident blogger in China, as described by Rebecca MacKinnon, a research fellow at Harvard’s Berkman Center who specializes in international media, and in particular Internet usage in China. She describes how the blog of a noted dissident named Zhao Jing — also known as Michael Anti — was taken down by MSN.

Robert Scoble of Microsoft says he too is upset by his company acting as a “state-run thug” in cases such as this, and that he has raised it with a senior MSN executive. Others have also said they will be raising the issue. No offence to the Scobleizer, who seems like a nice guy, but I can’t say I’m optimistic about such efforts having any real effect.

Microsoft isn’t the only one to engage in this kind of thing — Yahoo has already helped identify a dissident to the Chinese government and Google has been accused of filtering its search results in China to avoid dissident material. Everybody wants to do business in China, and no doubt they justify their government-friendly attitudes as being better than having no Internet at all, but that doesn’t make MSN’s behaviour right.

Share:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • email
  • Ma.gnolia
  • NewsVine
  • SphereIt
  • StumbleUpon
  • http://tech.memeorandum.com/060103/p50 tech.memeorandum @ 8:05 PM ET, January 3, 2006

    + Discussion:mathewingram.com/work, Things That, Get Real, B.L. Ochman’s weblog and RatcliffeBlog

  • http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060124.wxgeekwatchtechjune04/BNStory/Business/?pageRequested=all globeandmail.com : Geekwatch: Two boobs and a baby

    The service will also not have Google e-mail or blogs. This isn’t terribly surprising, given some of the activity by Google and other tech giants when it comes to China — such as the shutting down ofa noted dissident’s blog by Microsoft’s MSN, and the identification of another dissident (who was later arrested) by Yahoo. And Google has been accused of at least helping to filter results before, including in this Harvard study

  • http://ctv.globetechnology.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20040622.geekwatchjun04/tech/Technology/techBN/ctv-technology CTV.ca | CTV News, Shows and Sports – Canadian Television

    The service will also not have Google e-mail or blogs. This isn’t terribly surprising, given some of the activity by Google and other tech giants when it comes to China — such as the shutting down ofa noted dissident’s blog by Microsoft’s MSN, and the identification of another dissident (who was later arrested) by Yahoo. And Google has been accused of at least helping to filter results before, including in this Harvard study

  • http://www.globeinvestor.com/servlet/ArticleNews/story/RTGAM/20060210/rxgeekwatchbiz Globeinvestor.com: NBC sends a letter to YouTube

    The service will also not have Google e-mail or blogs. This isn’t terribly surprising, given some of the activity by Google and other tech giants when it comes to China — such as the shutting down ofa noted dissident’s blog by Microsoft’s MSN, and the identification of another dissident (who was later arrested) by Yahoo. And Google has been accused of at least helping to filter results before, including in this Harvard study

  • http://lihlii.spaces.msn.com 童言无忌

    »Bill censors a Chinese blogger from mathewingram.com/work Blogging is more than just something that geeks with a lot of time on their hands do for fun. In countries like China, blogs are one of the few ways dissidents can try to exercise a little freedom of speech something we in

  • http://www.corante.com/getreal Get Real: Stowe Boyd’s Soapbox

    Recent Trackbacks IT|Redux: Online Alternative to Excel BusinessBlogWire: How Personal Should Corporate Blogs Be? mathewingram.com/work:Bill censors a Chinese blogger mind this: Waves and wikis: Collaboration shifting away from email Oliver Thylmann – Thoughts: The 10/20/30 Rule of Powerpoint Teblog: Corporate blogging: stifling the individual Irwin Lazar’s “Real-Time” Blog:

  • http://oclcyc.wordpress.com/2006/01/03/blogero-chino-censurado-por-msn-spaces/ Ondas, cables, luces, cacharritos y cachivaches

    comportamiento de mi compañía en este caso no es correcto. Un caso a seguir… (Actualización: Madre la que se ha liado… solo en memeorandum hay ya todo esto, lo que da una idea clara de la importancia/interés que se está dando a la noticia:Bill censors a Chinese blogger, Forbidden Language — I have blogged before about the immoral actions …, WHEN THE INTERNET IS LESS FREE THAN WE THINK, MSN Spaces takes blog censorship to a new level, MSN in China and censorship of the Chinese blogosphere

  • http://www.metanoiac.com/archives/2006/01/internet_censor_2.html METANOIAC! a weblog from China

    Internet Censorship in China

    Bloggers all over the world are up in arms over Microsoft’s alleged censorship of a popular Chinese language blog on their free and widely used MSN spaces website builder. Some blogs in China get blocked for mentioning certain highly specific keywords…

  • http://www.computerworld.com/blogs/node/1655 Computerworld Blogs

    Google

    In today’s IT Blogwatch, we look at Google’s kowtow — or should that be "doing business"? Not to mention a poem about technology…
    What’s this we hear? Google kowtowing to government pressure — not the US but the Chinese government (as …

blog comments powered by Disqus

Older post:

Newer post: