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Shareholders Squeeze Cisco on Human Rights

Comatose51 writes "According to this article at Wired, Boston Common Asset Management, has filed a shareholders resolution asking Cisco to 'adopt a comprehensive human rights policy for its dealings with the Chinese government, and with other states practicing political censorship of the internet.' Cisco so far has asked the SEC to omit this proposal from the agenda for the next annual meeting, claiming that it already has a comprehensive human rights policy in place and that 'Cisco does not participate in any way in any censorship activities in the People's Republic of China ...' However, 'a report from the OpenNet Initiative watchdog group last April singled out Cisco for allegedly enabling the Chinese government's notorious "Great Firewall."' As a shareholder in Cisco, I would like to see this issue discussed and voted on."

264 comments

  1. Yawn! by gearmonger · · Score: 3, Funny
    Feh, if every company tried to impose its ideas of social justice on the governments it does business with, we'd have one monster of a mess on our hands. Leave the companies to make money and the voters to tell the government how to behave.

    Oh, wait.

    1. Re:Yawn! by jrockway · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The way I see it, Cisco has no responsibility for the "human rights" of China. They're not the government. If China comes to Cisco and says, we'll trade you these millions of dollars for your routers, they have an obligation to the shareholders to say OK. I mean, if they don't do it, then Juniper will do it. China is the one that is responsible for their misdeeds against their people, Cisco merely makes it slightly easier for them. That doesn't make them "liable" for it, though. They're just trying to make money. The shareholders are supposed to like money (isn't that why public corporations are all evil).

      The solution, of course, is to not buy Cisco products if this bothers you, though. I (for other reasons, mainly their habit of suing security people trying to HELP them) won't buy them anyway, but this is (I guess) yet another reason to look elsewhere for routers.

      --
      My other car is first.
    2. Re:Yawn! by bobbis.u · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Leave the companies to make money and the voters to tell the government how to behave

      That sounds like a great idea.

      Unfortunately, it seems that now some companies have succeeded in making lots of money, they are the ones telling the government how to behave.

      Arguably, some power still lies with the people because they are the ones who buy the companies products... but then you remember we are talking about multinational companies with foreign customers. These foreign customers include other governments - meaning that you effectively have foreign governments (i.e. China) wielding power over the US government. Don't you just love capitalism!?

    3. Re:Yawn! by arkhan_jg · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I've thought about your position, and it seems attractive, but then I remembered a counter-example.

      This is exactly the same argument the military equipment and weapons manufacturers use as to why they should be able to sell their guns to anyone with the money, and be able to sell any weapons, such as landmines, to anyone.

      Similar arguments are used by companies using what is near slave labour (and in some cases, actual slave labour through contractors) - if they can buy goods for the cheapest possible price, wouldn't they be remiss to the shareholders
      to not take advantage of it?

      We have a duty, through government, to prevent our national companies from doing significant harm as part of their business plan, and I think shareholders should also have the right, if not the duty, to put pressure on the company they own to also act in a more socially responsible way.

      In the end of the day, the shareholders own the company. If a majority of them think not helping censor free speech in china is more important than making the most money possible, then all power to them.

      --
      Remember kids, it's all fun and games until someone commits wholesale galactic genocide.
    4. Re:Yawn! by ebuck · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I wonder if you'd feel the same way if China made the same offer to Smith and Wesson, or Colt. How about Lockheed Martin or Raytheon? Dow Chemical?

      Trying to make money isn't justfication for every action, even when companies need the money desperately to stay in business. If it were, hit men would incorporate and KILCO (pun intended) would be listed on the NYSE.

    5. Re:Yawn! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me ajust this a bit for our viewers out there

      The way I see it, $BIGSTOCKHELDCOMPANY1 has no responsibility for the "human rights" of China. They're not the government. If China comes to $BIGSTOCKHELDCOMPANY1 and says, we'll trade you these millions of dollars for your $USEFULREPRESSIONITEMS, they have an obligation to the shareholders to say OK. I mean, if they don't do it, then $BIGSTOCKHELDCOMPANY2 will do it. China is the one that is responsible for their misdeeds against their people, $BIGSTOCKHELDCOMPANY1 merely makes it slightly easier for them. That doesn't make them "liable" for it, though. They're just trying to make money. The shareholders are supposed to like money (isn't that why public corporations are all evil).

      Sounds $DIRTYEXPLETIVE$ unethical to me.

      Fornextone

    6. Re:Yawn! by divide+overflow · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > If China comes to Cisco and says, we'll trade you these millions of dollars for your routers, they have an obligation to the shareholders to say OK.

      Unless, of course, the shareholders tell Cisco it ISN'T ok, which is EXACTLY what is happening. They are saying "Don't support censorship."

      So what is wrong about that?

    7. Re:Yawn! by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      they have an obligation to the shareholders to say OK

      Unless, of course, the shareholders say "I want Cisco to not provide China with firewall equipment". In which case, Cisco has an obligation to the shareholders to not provide China with firewall equipment.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    8. Re:Yawn! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The way I see it, IG Farben has no responsibility for the "human rights" of Germany. They're not the government. If Germany comes to IG Farben and says, we'll trade you these millions of dollars for your chemicals, they have an obligation to the shareholders to say OK. I mean, if they don't do it, then BASF will do it. Germany is the one that is responsible for their misdeeds against their people, IG Farben merely makes it slightly easier for them. That doesn't make them "liable" for it, though. They're just trying to make money. The shareholders are supposed to like money (isn't that why public corporations are all evil).

      The solution, of course, is to not buy IG Farben products if this bothers you, though. I (for other reasons, mainly their habit of suing security people trying to HELP them) won't buy them anyway, but this is (I guess) yet another reason to look elsewhere for chemicals.

    9. Re:Yawn! by mikefe · · Score: 1

      We have a duty, through government...

      Why does it have to be from the government?

      I like how this is targeting the company's shareholders. This is a nice new path to letting a company know people don't like what they're doing instead of losing a few hundred dollars because a few geeks boycotted them.

      (Having read the article...)

      I don't agree with this instance though. What if all of the routers were running Linux? Should we have export regulations for Linux now?

      Oh Wait, we already tried that with encryption. It didn't work.

      I would love to see them trying to keep Linux away from the chinese...

      --
      There: Something at a specific location.
      Their: Owned by someone.
      Please make sure your english compiles.
    10. Re:Yawn! by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Actually IG Farben is a good example of why you should not do business with murderous dictatorships, even if you only care about profit.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IG_Farben

      After the war, the directors were put on trial, and the company had it's assets siezed. Not that I'd expect anything that dramatic to happen to US companies doing business in China, but once the Chinese government changes I'd expect a few fairly devastating lawsuits from people that were forced to work for them.

      If I were a shareholder, I'd definitely want them to avoid getting involved in slave labour etc.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    11. Re:Yawn! by jcr · · Score: 1

      The way I see it, Cisco has no responsibility for the "human rights" of China.

      Was Farben devoid of responsibility for the use of Zyklon B?

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    12. Re:Yawn! by quanticle · · Score: 1

      KILCO can't be listed on the NYSE, as only = 3 letter symbols are permitted.

      KILCO can, however, be listed on the NASDAQ.

      --
      We all know what to do, but we don't know how to get re-elected once we have done it
    13. Re:Yawn! by doc+modulo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Exactly!

      If you feel you're one of the good guys, you should always oppose bad guys. And think real hard about what opposing means to you.

      Big corporations use all kinds of techniques to limit their badness in the eyes of the public. You know these techniques but may not be completely concious of it because of social influences.

      One of these techniques is spin (half-lies). Another is spreading the guilt out over as many people as possible. For example, the nazi death camp machine was kept running by thousands of normal people who all did a little evil thing. HOWEVER, the end result was millions of people tortured and executed.

      Do you really think that today there aren't any evil people in the world? Of course people who think like Hitler or Stalin exist today, some of them are even in the news. We are the good guys and everyone agrees (even the bad guys will) that evil and evil people need to be surpressed as much as possible.

      YOU are not a good guy if you see evil and don't do anything about it. If you see someone breaking the law then that's something for the police, depending if you agree with that law you should call the cops. On the other hand, police can't be everywhere and not all evil is covered by law. There are evil things people can do without breaking the law. That's where the good guys come in.

      A comment here, a small decision there will make a difference in the amount of evil in your society. The problem is that the culture is somehow against good guys in the: "nobody likes a smartass" kind of way. There are ways around that. You can give signals to evil doers in ways that do come across. One of them is mixing the message with something exciting or interesting, like humour or music. Another way is to send your message with conviction, if you really believe what you say and say it in a certain way, that will spill over in to your voice and body language. Show some balls in other words but don't be emotional about it, saying it as "matter of fact" works for me.

      The reasons I'm saying this, well Cisco is saying, we're only doing this little thing and recently they've tried to supress the information about a security vulnerability in their router OS. Just so they could sit on it so they could spend the least amount of money. The great thing is, one guy showed balls and told everyone they were in danger. He got sued and the FBI were sicced on him (probably as an between-the-lines threat) but he knew that in advance and he still did the right thing. In his presentation he even said something like: "this will get me sued and fired but I want people to know about this". You should hire this guy because he proved he can be trusted.

      Now I want YOU to do something to send a message to the evil in people's minds. Even though the people in Cisco individually might not be such bad guys, together they did end up doing the wrong thing in at least two instances. There are other ways of getting a good router for your network aren't there? Other brands, other kinds of solutions than a big router box, things like Eddie.

      I'm not asking you to become an activist or something but let's admin this organization called "society" in the best possible way, us smart and aware people know the right way, all we have to do now is act on it. Do a little small thing here and there and bring it in the right way. I made this post and I'm stopping here so I don't get get overwhelmed but I DID do something as the submitter and slashdot editor did their things. Good luck doing your thing and enjoy it when you've done it.

      --
      - -- Truth addict for life.
    14. Re:Yawn! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where would this stop?

      The *legal* porn industry, like it or not, spends a lot on Cisco gear. Content networking was practically created to support their sites. I might object to porn but that doesn't mean that Cisco should stop selling products to these companies.

      Cisco isn't breaking the law. If you can't deal with the ethics of it sell the stock! Jesus H...

    15. Re:Yawn! by bersl2 · · Score: 1

      Except that if they run Linux, nobody gets paid. Well, unless somebody decided to sell licenses of a distro to them.

    16. Re:Yawn! by kokoloko · · Score: 1

      Leave the companies to make money and the voters to tell the government how to behave.

      Yes, I've often wondered why those people in China keep voting for that terrible government they have.

    17. Re:Yawn! by mikefe · · Score: 1

      So, it's only bad if they charge for it?

      --
      There: Something at a specific location.
      Their: Owned by someone.
      Please make sure your english compiles.
    18. Re:Yawn! by dangitman · · Score: 4, Insightful
      They're not the government. If China comes to Cisco and says, we'll trade you these millions of dollars for your routers, they have an obligation to the shareholders to say OK. I mean, if they don't do it, then Juniper will do it. China is the one that is responsible for their misdeeds against their people,

      Do you feel the same way about IBM's collaboration with the Nazis, where their technology was used to track Jews and other undesirables for extermination or punishment? Or any of the other American businesses who collaborated with Nazis? What a company that sold medical equipment that was used for torture to Saddam? After all, it was just business. IBM just saw an opportunity to profit from fascism.

      And isn't the desire for profit one of the major motivations of fascism? Business is not politically neutral. Businesses have effects on society, and should live within the laws and values of a society. Excusing such actions because it happens outside the US is like approving of human rights violations because they did not happen on US soil. How can a country ask another country to abide by its standards on human rights, if it is not willing to hold companies that operate from that country, to participate in said violations of human rights?

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    19. Re:Yawn! by Nirvelli · · Score: 1

      This is exactly the same argument the military equipment and weapons manufacturers use as to why they should be able to sell their guns to anyone

      Really? I thought that was the Second Amendment...

    20. Re:Yawn! by secolactico · · Score: 1

      YOU are not a good guy if you see evil and don't do anything about it. If you see someone breaking the law then that's something for the police, depending if you agree with that law you should call the cops. On the other hand, police can't be everywhere and not all evil is covered by law. There are evil things people can do without breaking the law. That's where the good guys come in.

      "History will have to record that the greatest tragedy of this period of social transition was not the strident clamor of the bad people, but the appalling silence of the good people. "
        --- Martin Luther King, Jr.

      This was also true before MLK and is true today. Part of me knows that apathy is a terrible thing. And yet I don't care enough that it is... :-(

      Like Terry Pratchett said, I think it was in Hogfather: "Why is that when people say 'Somebody should do something' they don't say 'and that somebody is me!!'" (quoted (badly) from memory).

      --
      No sig
    21. Re:Yawn! by tsm_sf · · Score: 1

      yeah, people always forget the "and homicidal jackasses in Africa" coda to that amendment.

      --
      Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
    22. Re:Yawn! by arkhan_jg · · Score: 1

      Well I don't believe government intervention is warranted in this case per se.

      I was thinking more of significant physical harm, such as using government regulation to stop exports of nuclear weapons, heavy metal poisoning from runoff, extreme exploitation of the workforce etc, that's where government has a duty to step in and stop a company.

      Linux, encryption, and routers, have lots of legitimate uses, and government regulation of those is unwarranted.

      If the shareholders wanted to stop say redhat, from removing the taiwanese flag from their distro, that's their right, but government intervention isn't warranted in that case, IMHO.

      Hope that clarifies my position slightly.

      --
      Remember kids, it's all fun and games until someone commits wholesale galactic genocide.
    23. Re:Yawn! by Seraphim1982 · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the information. Before this I wasn't aware that the Second Amendment applied to places outside of the United States.

    24. Re:Yawn! by arkhan_jg · · Score: 1

      I was thinking of exporting military aircraft to brutal dictatorships, anti-personnel landmines, large contingents of weapons to people fighting a civil war, things of that nature.

      As you say, the 2nd amendment - and it's ramifications - is a matter for americans, and as a non-american I don't really want to comment on that.

      British and US companies export significant quantities of weapons, and are regulated so they can't export to certain countries because of the harm such exports would do. That's regulation I agree with, and isn't related to the 2nd amendment. Well, until we get a US world dictatorship ;)

      --
      Remember kids, it's all fun and games until someone commits wholesale galactic genocide.
    25. Re:Yawn! by doc+modulo · · Score: 1

      "This was also true before MLK and is true today. Part of me knows that apathy is a terrible thing. And yet I don't care enough that it is... :-("

      Honest and insightful. Don't worry, it's natural to be apathetic to abstract dangers. The abstract danger being that you'll end up in a dictatorship if not all good guys act to supress small and big evils. The danger system of your brain isn't in the newest/modern/logical part but in the middle/mammalian/emotional part of your brain. And that part just doesn't make a big enough connection between not stopping little evils and then ending up in a dangerous society. It works much simpler than that, most of the time anyway.
      More on this phenomenon can be found in this article. (save it).

      By definition, caring enough to act is a state of mind. It is possible to restructure your beliefs/your way of thinking so you'll be able to act in the right way when you see evil in the future. It seems to me you care enough about being able to care. I mean you care enough to change your ways. I personally find it helpful to take a step back and really think about my own thinking and changing the parts I don't like.

      There are ways of doing this and most of those ways are called self-help. You have to be careful of quacks but there are genuine people among the self-help and neuro linguistic programming community. I suggest you download David DeAngelo's "Double Your Dating" video's from somewhere (I downloaded from eMule P2P). The reason is because it combines fun with important.

      He talks a lot about other self-help stuff that he found to be good if you want to continue in that way but his vids are a great introduction. He also shows good ways to get laid. David DeAngelo takes a more biological/evolution/nature approach and Ross Jeffries takes a more "nurture" approach.

      My suggestion, try to see the fun in taking action. Give your emotional brain some kind of reward for acting the right way like "satisfaction" or "logic buzz" or something.

      Have fun with it.

      --
      - -- Truth addict for life.
    26. Re:Yawn! by demachina · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "We have a duty, through government, to prevent our national companies from doing significant harm as part of their business plan, and I think shareholders should also have the right, if not the duty, to put pressure on the company they own to also act in a more socially responsible way."

      What a quaint idea, only there is no such thing as "our national companies" anymore. Most multinationals are approaching stateless entities. Many are moving headquarters to offshore havens with tax codes and regulation friendly to big corporations. If government really tried to pressure any of them out of China they could easily do the same and wave goodby to the U.S. as their home base.

      John Chambers, Cisco's CEO, has given some infamous speeches where he has declared Cisco is becoming a "Chinese company". Some excerpts. So if you want to argue what nation Cisco belongs to they may have already seceeded from the U.S. and raised their flag in Beijing.

      In the case of Cisco, if you read the link above you see China is the one dicatating to Cisco what to do, not the U.S. government.

      The other obvious fact is most of the big multinationals are so powerful, and have such massive influence on the politicians and bureaucrats that run the U.S. government, its much more a case where they are pressuring the government and dictating to it on how to treat China, not vice versa. In particular they are demanding the U.S. throw open American markets to Chinese goods (same for NAFTA and CAFTA nations) because there is short term profit in it for those multinationals because they help make and sell those goods, and especially because they want the cheap labor, no environmental regulation etc. They are in most respects dictating to the U.S. government a policy towards China that is already very detrimental and could eventually be devestating to the U.S. economy. The U.S economy simply can't sustain half trillion dollar, and exploding, deficits. If the U.S. government were acting in the interest of the people and the long term health of the U.S. as a nation it would be erecting trade barriers, raising tariffs on Chinese goods, and withdrawing most favored status. Instead the government is collapsing barriers to Chinese goods and Chinese investment in the U.S. at the same time the Chinese maintain MASSIVE barriers to U.S. goods being sold in China and U.S. companies doing business there. In particular the only way U.S. companies get a foothold in China is they must partner with Chinese companies and usually transfer IP and markets to them to gain that entry, IBM's sale to Lenovo being the classic example.

      Now shareholders certainly do have a right to dictate the direction of the corporation but ONLY if they can muster enough votes to dictate that direction. Shareholder pressure certainly has dictated corprate responsibility in the past on places like South Africa. But China is a LOT bigger economic prize than South Africa. For all the socially responsible investors that might want to get a company out of China, there are probably as many or more that want to dive in head first because there are potentially large profits to be made there, if they pass on them some competitor will reap them. Unfortunately in free markets, free markets get to decide which side wins in the end. Profits almost always win out over social responsibility. South Africa was was an exception because it wasn't that important to most companies, and being associated with it did cut in to their profits because it was such a pariah. Cisco is betting its entire future in China so it wont cut China loose without a major fight in the boardroom and shareholder's meeting.

      --
      @de_machina
    27. Re:Yawn! by poopdeville · · Score: 1

      I'm not trying to bring your comment down, but I think it's interesting how many times Nazi analogies have been used in this thread without anyone invoking Goodwin's Law. These analogies, for once, actually work.

      --
      After all, I am strangely colored.
    28. Re:Yawn! by BackInIraq · · Score: 1

      So, it's only bad if they charge for it?

      Well, the way most people would say it is, "It's only bad if they profit from it." Says basically the same thing, but emphasizes the benefit the company is recieving for the infraction in question.

      Also, in the case of Linux, there isn't any realistic way to stop a government from using it to violate the human rights of their people...it's easily duplicated and freely available. But make a physical product, then sell that product to the same government, it's a whole different animal.

    29. Re:Yawn! by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > This is exactly the same argument the military equipment and weapons
      > manufacturers use as to why they should be able to sell their guns to
      > anyone with the money

      You really think certain people/organizations/whatever shouldn't be able to buy networking equipment, because they've been known to abuse it? It's one thing being careful whom you sell thermonuclear ICBMs; it's quite another thing to say, "You want to buy some WAN equipment? Great! We'll have to do this background check on you, to make sure you aren't going to do anything untoward with it..."

      There's another matter too: if everyone who sells networking equipment won't sell any to China, so they can't use them for political censorship, how are they supposed to maintain a network, then, so that any of their people can access the internet at all? Is no internet better for the people than a censored internet?

      I'm very against political censorship (as opposed to other kinds of censorship, which generally don't bother me), but I'm not sure refusing to sell networking equipment to certain countries is an appropriate solution.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    30. Re:Yawn! by derfla8 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Isn't this a good example of the irony of the capitalist mentality of industrialized nations. Policy driven by the need to make money until it offends enough with those with the power to make change.

      I mean, let me see are you telling me censorship does not exist in the US? And what is the policy on homosexuality and gay marriage by the president in the United States? Wow, certain people are oppressed in the US too you know?

      Funny we speak of good and bad like we actually know how to define such as well. So it is being "good" to be against the policies of a foreign government. Yet it is bad to limit the "freedom" to bear arms in the United States. And gun manufacturers are never factored into the equation when things like Columbine happen.

    31. Re:Yawn! by hopethisnickisnottak · · Score: 1

      I speak as a neutral observer to this debate. I am not Chinese, nor am I American. I don't own stock in Cisco or its competitor. But I come from one country which has been the target of Chinese aggression before. India. We fought a war against them in 1962 and lost. They are illegally occupying many thousand sq. km. of our territory (just like Pakistan) and all this happened with the blessings of the US. You speak of censorship in the US. You speak of rights being trampled upon in the US. You know nothing of censorship or trampling of rights. Go speak to a Tibetean refugee (there are whole towns and cities filled with them in the Himachal Pradesh state of India). Then you'll know how privileged an existence you lead. Don't go about comparing the rights violation by the US with the rights violation by China. Take the worst possible example of rights violation you can think of. I guess you're thinking of the Nazis. Multiply that a hundred times with itself. There you get the Chinese. This is happening because Corporations are bending over backwards at the Chinese government's behest to earn some more profits. The Nazis were extremely racist and so are the Chinese. Ask my tibetean. The thinking of corporations is very short term. The moment China can afford to do so (economically and militarily), they will show the US the finger and take Taiwan. Then we'll have Arunachal Pradesh (a part of India since 1947) next in line, followed by Sikkim, Ladakh and other parts of Northeast and North India. Somewhere in there they'll take over Nepal as well. They've already taken over Pakistan (where do you think Pakistan gets its ballistic missiles, aircraft and nuclear reactors / weapons from?) And it's apologists like you who are preventing straightforward debate about this monster. Someday we're all going to pay for the greed of Corporations.

      --
      -Shaunak
    32. Re:Yawn! by hopethisnickisnottak · · Score: 1

      I speak as a neutral observer to this debate. I am not Chinese, nor am I American. I don't own stock in Cisco or its competitor. But I come from one country which has been the target of Chinese aggression before. India. We fought a war against them in 1962 and lost. They are illegally occupying many thousand sq. km. of our territory (just like Pakistan) and all this happened with the blessings of the US.

      You speak of censorship in the US. You speak of rights being trampled upon in the US. You know nothing of censorship or trampling of rights. Go speak to a Tibetean refugee (there are whole towns and cities filled with them in the Himachal Pradesh state of India). Then you'll know how privileged an existence you lead.

      Don't go about comparing the rights violation by the US with the rights violation by China.

      Take the worst possible example of rights violation you can think of. I guess you're thinking of the Nazis. Multiply that a hundred times with itself. There you get the Chinese. This is happening because Corporations are bending over backwards at the Chinese government's behest to earn some more profits.

      The Nazis were extremely racist and so are the Chinese. Ask my tibetean.

      The thinking of corporations is very short term. The moment China can afford to do so (economically and militarily), they will show the US the finger and take Taiwan. Then we'll have Arunachal Pradesh (a part of India since 1947) next in line, followed by Sikkim, Ladakh and other parts of Northeast and North India. Somewhere in there they'll take over Nepal as well. They've already taken over Pakistan (where do you think Pakistan gets its ballistic missiles, aircraft and nuclear reactors / weapons from?)

      And it's apologists like you who are preventing straightforward debate about this monster.

      Someday we're all going to pay for the greed of Corporations.

      --
      -Shaunak
    33. Re:Yawn! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    34. Re:Yawn! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The shareholders are supposed to like money (isn't that why public corporations are all evil).

      This is the kind of ridiculousness that justifies all the worst corporate abuses. Companies don't act according to shareholders' ACTUAL wishes, they act according to what they assume is their single concern, which is to make the most money possible.

      The solution, of course, is to not buy Cisco products if this bothers you, though. I (for other reasons, mainly their habit of suing security people trying to HELP them) won't buy them anyway, but this is (I guess) yet another reason to look elsewhere for routers.

      That would hurt Cisco's profits. Thsi would be a concern for shareholders. They might want to do something to avoid it -- like, say, sponsoring this resolution.

  2. Finally. by FusionDragon2099 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In every other discussion on /. about companies in China, we're told that it's the shareholders that force them to operate there. It's nice to see someone who's socially responsible for once.

    1. Re:Finally. by Keruo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sadly socially responsible =! financially profitable.
      Explains why rich shareholders push operations towards China.
      And lets not forget, once China gets their human rights issues resolved, there's tons of profit to be made.
      It is after all the largest market area in the world, and currently growing at fastest pace compared to the rest of the world.

      --
      There are no atheists when recovering from tape backup.
    2. Re:Finally. by Dogtanian · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And lets not forget, once China gets their human rights issues resolved, there's tons of profit to be made.

      There's tons of profit to be made *without* them resolving their human rights issues. If you're implying that profit will improve Chinese human rights, I'm not convinced of that, for the reason I've just given.

      I didn't get the impression you were saying that Western companies could wait until China had resolved its human rights issues before investing and reaping profit...

      It is after all the largest market area in the world, and currently growing at fastest pace compared to the rest of the world.

      And although many westerners can see a vast pool of profit in the Chinese market, the Chinese government and friends (i.e. the strata for whose benefit the country is run; let's not kid ourselves that China today is *anything* but an uber-capitalistic plutocracy) have a vested interest in keeping that money and power for themselves.

      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    3. Re:Finally. by mcc · · Score: 1

      And lets not forget, once China gets their human rights issues resolved, there's tons of profit to be made.

      Unfortunately "China gets their human rights issues resolved" is much less likely to mean "China stops human rights abuses" than it is to mean "America convinces its citizens to stop caring about China's human rights abuses".

      And, frankly, it seems that China's human rights issues are probably already almost "resolved" in this sense at this point.

    4. Re:Finally. by B'Trey · · Score: 1

      Exactly how should Cisco be "socially responsible?" By refusing to sell routers to anyone in China? If Cisco is specifically adding features to their routers at the request of the Chinese government or because it will help the Chinese government censor the internet for their citizens, then by all means someone post a pointer to the information. Everything I've seen indicates that the Chinese government is using the exact same capabilitities that I use to filter spam and viruses and other forms of malware. They're choosing to use the tool for censorship rather than protection.

      Why is it that if someone uses Kazaa to download copyrighted material, everyone yells about the Betamax defense. If a script kiddie uses Metasploit to break into someone's network, we don't start yelling at the Metaploit crew about beings socially responsible. (And if others do, you can rely on the Slashdot crowd to leap to their defense.) I don't recall alot of condemnation of Michael Lynn for not being socially responsible when he decided to talk about vulnerabilities in Cisco products against the wishes of both Cisco and his employer. But if Cisco sells routers to someone who uses them for a nefarious purpose, suddenly Cisco needs to be socially responsible and is culpable for the actions of the Chinese government.

      A router is a tool. It can be used for both good purposes and bad. The maker of a tool is not responsible for the use to which a tool is put. Leave Cisco alone on this one.

      --

      "The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.

    5. Re:Finally. by Xabraxas · · Score: 1
      Point taken. I do think that Cisco should listen to their shareholders though and enact a policy that explicity states opposition to human rights violations. The article does link to this policy but it doesn't seem to explain too much in the way of human rights, in fact it does mention the UN Global Compact but I fail to see a one to one correlation with their existing stated policies. The shareholders are not asking for Cisco to refuse to sell to China, only to enact a specific policy against human rights violations. I think that's a fair request.

      The article states:

      Cisco recently came under fire when author Ethan Gutman revealed the company was aggressively marketing mobile police-networking equipment to Chinese law enforcement agencies.

      Export constraints passed in the wake of the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre block U.S. companies from selling "any crime control or detection instruments or equipment" to China

      I think this may have something to do with the recent request by shareholders.

      --
      Time makes more converts than reason
    6. Re:Finally. by thjayoromanov · · Score: 1

      America is the largest market area in the world [followed by Japan and EU]. How can this be, if China is so overpopulated? America is the richest country, the most consuming one, and everybody has got money (some have more, others less, but almost everybody) China is a billion-people nation, but, not every chinese have the consuming power of an american

  3. You and everyone else ... by El+Cubano · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As a shareholder in Cisco, I would like to see this issue discussed and voted on.

    And as executives, the members of the board would like to see this swept under the rug as quickly and quietly as possible. Remember that such a resolution would impede the company's ability to do business in the single fastest growing tech market in the world.

    IIRC, I read in a recent issue of IEEE Spectrum that Cisco was also a winner of one of six huge contracts to rebuild China's Internet infrastructure. I highly doubt the Chinese government would have chosen Cisco if they did not have the ability to sensor as the Chinese government on it. If you can lay your hands on that copy of Spectrum, they specifically discuss the censorship issue and speculate as to whether or not Cisco is party to it.

    1. Re:You and everyone else ... by loyukfai · · Score: 1

      I can't speak for the executives but IMO what the parent said is quite true.

      Also, don't forget that if Cisco is forced to deal with the human right issues and the PRC government is fed up, she can go to Huawei http://www.huawei.com/ instead for all the equipment and solutions she need.

      Considering the lawsuit Cisco brought against Huawei before, what else could be a better middle-finger than this?

      If what the stockholders concern most is short-term profit, I guess this issue maybe better leave aside.

    2. Re:You and everyone else ... by doc+modulo · · Score: 1

      I think a good solution to this problem would be to force Cisco to not sell to China somehow which would force Cisco to "lobby" the US government into stricter laws. That way competitors couldn't sell to China either.

      Works for Cisco and works for the "good guys" and everyone's happy.

      --
      - -- Truth addict for life.
    3. Re:You and everyone else ... by HardCase · · Score: 1

      Cisco isn't really the villain here. The problem is, of course, that the Chinese government controls the nation's Internet access. The "Great Firewall" isn't any special technology - it's just use of existing standards and equipment. It's hard to make Cisco complicit in repressing human rights if all they're doing is selling into that market the same stuff that they sell to everyone else. These aren't guns or bombs. Routers don't kill people.

      An alternative, I guess, is to embargo the sale of network routing equipment to China. Deny the Chinese access to the Internet completely. Obviously that's not going to happen.

      As long as the government controls access to the Internet, they'll allow access in whatever way they see fit. I say let Cisco sell into China. It helps to reduce our balance of trade and gets another non-Chinese company a toehold in the country.

      The people in China who care already know that their Internet access is filtered. They are the ones who are working for change. Opening markets to western countries in China will do more to help their cause than cutting them off. I agree that, in the short term, the censorship issue is a problem, but in the long term, developing business relationships with the west will do more to overcome the political problems in China than isolation will.

      In the interest of disclosure, I work for a company that manufactures and sells electronic devices into China and some of those devices end up in Cisco routers. They also end up in Legend computers, too. The end result of that is that money moves from China to the US. A side benefit is that we spend a lot of time communicating with our Chinese counterparts, who see some significant differences between their lifestyles and freedoms and ours. Don't think that goes unnoticed.

      -h-

    4. Re:You and everyone else ... by Frank+T.+Lofaro+Jr. · · Score: 1

      Do Chinese IT people have to work 80 hour weeks and constantly be on call, and end up getting laid off anyway, like in many American companies?

      --
      Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
    5. Re:You and everyone else ... by demachina · · Score: 1

      "Remember that such a resolution would impede the company's ability to do business in the single fastest growing tech market in the world."

      Its interesting in the 1930's you could said exactly the same thing about Nazi Germany. It was the world's booming economy during a time that much of the world was languishing in depression, they were pushing tech frontiers too. During this period Germany was the must invest place for many affluent American's, including the Bush family. George W's grandfather Prescott was a principle at Union Banking in New York and one of his biggest clients was the Thyssen family, one of Germany's richest industrial dynasties. Fritz Thyssen bank rolled Hitler's rise to power and help consolidate German industrialists behind the Nazi's at a key juncture, something they came to very much regret. He wrote a dull book about it "I Paid Hitler". Union Banking's assets were siezed when the U.S. entered the war much to the embarrassment of the Bush family. They weren't alone though, MANY wealthy Americans, Brits and major corporations were heavily invested in Nazi Germany in the 30's. They too saw profit potential, a booming ecomony while the rest of the west was languishing, and chose to disregard the realities of a regime with an appalling human rights record.

      In many respects China might be a mirror image. China has in recent years jumped from a supposed Communist state to very much a Fascist one. In the communist state the state owned everything. In the Fascist state there are corporations and private ownership, but party members have a huge head start in every business venture thanks to massive state intervention and backing on their behalf, just like Nazi Germany. A brief article on how heavily China's big new corporations are infused with Communist party members, family members of high ranking members, and state ownership and backing. For example Haier their big name in appliances which recently tried a bid for Maytag:

      "Haier's longtime chief executive, Zhang Ruimin, likes to call himself the "Chinese Jack Welch" after the famous American business icon and former head of GE. But Jack Welch was never a member of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party."

      When China was a communist state, with state ownership the West would have nothing to do with it. Nothing has really changed on its repression or human rights front, but as soon as it jumped to a Fascist state which allowed private ownership, investment and profit, it suddently became a darling of Western businessmen and politicians, just as Nazi Germany was.

      I think this is a place where the addage applies that people who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it. In the rush for profit, as in the 1930's in Nazi Germany, are western businessmen accellerating the rise of an economic and military power that might seek to dominate the world and spread its brand of repression across the globe. Historians will contend China has never really sought to project its power outward, but then China has never been a fascist power in a globalized world, riding a rising ride of wealth, military power and technical prowess that will soon make it possible for it to achieve global superpower status. The big question then is will it be benign or will it follow in the footsteps of its Fascist forebearers and seek to dominate the world militarily, and inflicts it repression on the rest of the world in the process.

      --
      @de_machina
    6. Re:You and everyone else ... by HardCase · · Score: 1

      Do Chinese IT people have to work 80 hour weeks and constantly be on call, and end up getting laid off anyway, like in many American companies?

      Beats me - like I said, I talk to my counterparts in China. Engineers.

      However, those to whom I've spoken face to face give me the impression that they would be happy to trade places with pretty much anybody over here.

      -h-

    7. Re:You and everyone else ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please learn to spell and to punctuate. You make yourself look like an ass, otherwise.

  4. i concur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Me and all 10 of my shares would like to see something done about this!

  5. Et tu, Microsoft by Black+Parrot · · Score: 3, Interesting


    You probably won't hear it on the evening news in the USA, but Microsoft is also actively engaged in helping China with political censorship.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    1. Re:Et tu, Microsoft by justins · · Score: 1

      It wouldn't have been the same without a "Microsoft is teh evil!" post.

      --
      Now before I get modded down, I be to remind whoever might read this that what I am saying is FACT. - bogaboga
    2. Re:Et tu, Microsoft by SonnicBoom · · Score: 1

      A similar resolution has been on the ballot for a few years for MSFT. Never gets anywhere.

  6. Why do they care? by Seumas · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Maybe I'm missing something here but why do SHAREHOLDERS care about human rights? Human rights have NOTHING to do with PROFIT.

    1. Re:Why do they care? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Because some shareholders are still human?

    2. Re:Why do they care? by tkrotchko · · Score: 3, Informative

      Shareholders are allowed to care about whatever they want. It's their company.

      --
      You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
    3. Re:Why do they care? by shawb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Shareholders are the owners of the company. Within reason, they can collectively use this power to further any agenda they want, be it political, environmental or the usual financial. From Wikipedia: In the United States most cooperatives are corporations or limited liability companies. Co-ops can further the agenda of getting organic food out to the people who want it, providing low cost housing to members, or simply sharing access to automobiles to reduce environmental impact. I for one am glad that these shareholders aren't just passing the buck on this issue. Heck, I'm happy to see the investors taking responsibility on any issue like this. Although one can still suspect that there are alterior financial motives, but it could be as simply as good PR in an industry that considers access to information to be important enough to boycot, or at least choose a competitor's product, because of their involvement in China.

      --
      I'll never make that mistake again, reading the experts' opinions. - Feynman
    4. Re:Why do they care? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are you? Ferengi?

    5. Re:Why do they care? by Inverted+Pilot · · Score: 1

      The thing is, economics is about the accumulation of things that are desirable (ie, "goods") for oneself (whether one happens to be a person, or a fictional entity like a corporation).

      Money is not the only valuable thing. It's just the one that's easiest to measure, and it's pretty much universally exchangeable too.

      One might assign a positive economic value to having clean air to breathe and clean water to use. One might also assign a positive value to, say, a legal environment that allows free experimentation with other people's inventions, and the right to improve upon them. One might say that freedom of speech in China is worth something.

      All of those things cost money, and until there's a way to identify such intangible and semi-tangible social benefits and account for them (i.e., be rewared for accumulating them) properly, people and corporations will continue to accumulate money only.

      That said, it's not Cisco's job to solve this problem unilaterally. Perhaps governments should impose regulation on such vendors that encourage the development of the social effects we want. By effectively imposing a tax on the entire industry, the operating environment changes and corporate innovation is steered a bit.

      But of course there's no such thing as a global government with such power, and if Cisco and Juniper were subject to such regulateion, Huawei would not be. This is international trade for you.

    6. Re:Why do they care? by ebuck · · Score: 1

      Perhaps shareholders see themselves as part of humanity and are more interested in making the world a better place to live than in earning a few extra dollars.

      But that's probably a delusion, after all, with that extra $4, you can go out and buy yourself a better world, right? Well, mabye with $4,000? $4,000,000? $4,000,000,000? How much does a better planet to live on cost?

      Perhaps now you'll see why a shareholder should be concerned if the company they partially own is abusing other people.

    7. Re:Why do they care? by BlurryEyed · · Score: 1

      Maybe I'm missing something here but why do SHAREHOLDERS care about human rights? Human rights have NOTHING to do with PROFIT.

      ...and would that something be a soul?
      Accountability is a good thing. Let's hope it's a trend.

    8. Re:Why do they care? by dangitman · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Maybe I'm missing something here but why do SHAREHOLDERS care about human rights?

      Maybe because they are decent human beings. I did not realize that becoming a shareholder meant that you had to stop caring about human rights, which are enshrined in the US Constitution, which is what allows the existence of businesses in the US in the first place.

      Parsing your statement, if we know that the majority of Americans are actually shareholders, then you must be arguing that the majority of Americans should not care about human rights. Do you see something wrong with this picture?

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
  7. Cisco is not a business of social activism. by blcamp · · Score: 3, Insightful


    It is a business of network equipment. It has the primary goal of turning over as much equipment as it can, and make as much money as it can... what's the phrase? "Maximizing Shareholder Value".

    It's not Cisco's prerogative to try and tell ANY government how to draw up policy... all they need to do is keep selling hardware... at a profit.

    If a couple shareholders don't like it, buy them out and tell them to move on. Seriously.

    I mean, puh-leeze...

    --
    The problem with socialism is that they always run out of other people's money. - Margaret Thatcher
    1. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by arose · · Score: 1

      Their primary and only goal is to do what the owners decide.

      --
      Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
    2. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It is a business of network equipment. It has the primary goal of turning over as much equipment as it can, and make as much money as it can... what's the phrase? "Maximizing Shareholder Value".

      It's not Cisco's prerogative to try and tell ANY government how to draw up policy... all they need to do is keep selling hardware... at a profit.

      That's up to the shareholders to decide, isn't it? If a couple of shareholders don't like it, they can make a big stink about it. Maybe they'll find that a lot of other shareholders feel the same way. Maybe they can vote on the issue and avoid being involved in such immoral activity.

    3. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      what's the phrase? "Maximizing Shareholder Value".

      And if it ends up (unlikely as it may be) that most of the shareholders decide that they value freedom as well as incremental profits, then Cisco will be obliged to work towards providing that value.

    4. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by dbarclay10 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      It is a business of network equipment. It has the primary goal of turning over as much equipment as it can, and make as much money as it can... what's the phrase? "Maximizing Shareholder Value".

      You misunderstand the stock market system. The stock market system is about making the executive and management of a company responsible to a large number of stakeholders. It's easy to hold them responsible to a small number of people, but once you get millions of stakeholders, it's a bit more difficult.

      In a way though, you're right - it all gets down to "maximizing shareholder value." Except it's the shareholders who decide what they value - not you (likely an armchair stock analyst without any Cisco stock), the executive, the management, or the employees.

      If some shareholders feel that protecting their freedoms is valuable, and they feel that one of the ways Cisco can do that is by refusing to allow those freedoms to be curtailed - at least on such a massive scale as China - using their technology, then the appropriate course of action would attempt to bring the issue to a vote.

      --

      Barclay family motto:
      Aut agere aut mori.
      (Either action or death.)
    5. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by NotFamous · · Score: 1

      Trues, military arms companies having been doing this for years.

      --
      Some settling may occur during posting.
    6. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by JimBobJoe · · Score: 1

      what's the phrase? "Maximizing Shareholder Value"

      Yes, and there are actually a lot of different ways to maximize shareholder value.

      There are those who would say that General Motors, by persuing large and quick profits by overselling its SUV lines was "maximizing shareholder value"--because it brought significant profits back to its shareholders in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

      A GM shareholder might not have been pleased being a Toyota shareholder. Toyota, during the time period that GM was making crazy profits on SUVs, was nurturing, at enormous expense, hybrid technology, and then selling an econobox hybrid vehicle when gasoline was at its lowest price in decades, at a sizeable loss per vehicle. However history shall show that Toyota, too, was "maximizing shareholder value" by taking a long term to very long term perspective on the future of automobiles, at the expense of short term profits. Suffice it to say, GM would not have called what Toyota did "maximizing shareholder value" and Toyota would not have called GMs practices "maximizing shareholder value."

      Wall Street analysts bitch all the time about Costco, which they claim is not "maximizing shareholder value" because of its costly employee reimbursement packages. They wished the company was on the stingier side, like Wal Mart. Amusingly, Costco is, at this point in time, a better investment, but in any case, the board of directors of Costco believe that "maximizing shareholder value" includes not just dividends and share performance, but also being a company that has an enviable reputation, and that people want to be associated with, and therefore, invest in. Much like Toyota, Costco is a great stock for the long run, because it's a company that believes that certain things are important in the long run, at the expense of the short run.

      Boston Common has raised the interesting idea that Cisco could hurt its reputation by selling its wares to governments who use them poorly. Whether you believe that argument or not (I'm sitting on the fence) there's no doubt that reputation has something to do with shareholder value. If the situation blew up for Cisco, it could result in the loss of many clients (in particular, state and local governments, who are sometimes targetted by activists regarding their procurement decisions.)

      Shareholder social activism, incidentally, is not a new thing. The California Public Employees Retirement System is one of the nation's largest equity holders, and they have been agressive in throwing their weight around in recent times (and to say they're too big to buy out is an understatment.) The idea that activism could occur this way is finally starting to dawn on progressive activists (slowly) and I think you're going to see quite a lot more of it in years to come.

    7. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by forand · · Score: 1

      I don't know what I disagree with more: your statement that a company has no prerogative to choose to do business only with those that they don't find offensive or your complete lack of respect for the process that lets shareholders have a say in how their company is run.

      Since we are talking about corporations here, which in the US have most of the rights of a human, I do not see why they should not have to abide by the same laws that I do. I cannot go and support the mafia trying to strong arm local businesses into doing as they like. Why should a corporation not be held to these same standards? While China does not have the same record as the mafia in the eye of our government it is no shining light of personal liberty.

      Furthermore if the shareholder want their company to behave in a certain manner even if that is not the most profitable they have every right to do so. From the article it appears that the group of share holders is going about their request in the correct way and I don't see any reason why they should not be allowed to discuss it at the meeting, there the other share holders can vote and choose to do as they please. Your atitude ignores the rights of the shareholders that you dissagree with.

    8. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by Surt · · Score: 1

      Tell that to the companies which have lost billions due to being held accountable for among other things: cigarette sales and helping the nazis kill jews. Maximizing shareholder value doesn't mean only making as much profit as possible, but also being careful to avoid the possibility of lawsuits rendering those profits moot in the long term. Violating human rights is a good way to get yourself sued in the long term. In this case, potentially by a class action lawsuit involving over a billion chinese.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    9. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is a business of network equipment. It has the primary goal of turning over as much equipment as it can, and make as much money as it can... what's the phrase? "Maximizing Shareholder Value".

      So anything goes, right?

      Kickbacks to Saddam Hussein, missle technology to Iran, just whatever. Loans to the Nazis during World War II. Manipulating the California energy market. Selling the latest greatest miltech to dictators and terrorists. Corporations, which don't have consciences like real people, are free to do just what the hell ever without any restraints, so long as they make money doing it. Is that how it is?

      You know what? Fuck you and every son-of-a-bitch on this board like you. I'm sick of the Social Darwinist misfits around here.

      You may not give a damn how people suffer because of corporate greed, but people who have morals do. Just go back to your basement and leave running the world to people who understand that everyone, and I mean everyone, has a stake in making it a better place. The fact that you lack the empathy to worry about the suffering of others doesn't mean the rest of us have to be so limited.

    10. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Cisco is any business that shareholders say it is in.

      If a majority of shareholders want to produce energy efficent lead-free routers then Cisco is in the business of producing energy efficent lead-free routers and you are going to start seeing advertizments touting the new "Green" Cisco routers. If a majority of shareholders want to donate 10% of all sales towards curing cancer simply because they think it's a good cause, well they can do that too.

      Such policies can also have direct financial benefits. Whether it's environmental policies or disrepuatable business relations, such policies can be valuable assets to the brand name and valuable in avoiding bad press tarninshing the brand.

      If a couple shareholders don't like it, buy them out and tell them to move on.

      Yep! However you might need a Very Large Pocketbook if most shareholders support the the proposed policy.

      Of course it's a non-issue if most shareholders don't support the proposed policy.

      The striking news story here here is, from the story:
      Cisco is formally asking the Securities and Exchange Commission to omit the Boston Common proposal from the agenda for the company's next annual meeting in November, which would prevent shareholders from voting on it.

      Regardless of whether a new Cicso-China policy is a good idea or not, the executives are indisputably PLAYING DIRTY POOL trying to BLOCK A VOTE like this.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    11. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by EiZei · · Score: 1

      So were the nazi bankers and IG Farben executives wrongfully convicted when they made holocaust possible?

    12. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by blcamp · · Score: 1

      I have read the 8 replies to my OP (as of this writing).

      I was afraid some people would mischaracterize my comments, and I was right.

      I said it is Cisco's "primary goal" to turn over equipment and make money. I did NOT say it was their ONLY goal.

      Some mentioned I do not respect (or understand) the shareholder system. While I do not own CSCO, I do own other companies. I know full well about how shareholders make thier voices heard.

      Some presume that raising an issue like this will make the issue snowball on the Cisco board and make them roll over and say "OK China, we won't sell you any more equipment until you respect human rights."

      I say, with all due respect, to those of you that really think that is going to happen... that you're out of your friggin' minds.

      Consider the financial COSTs of a couple things here. The cost of the bad PR that these dissident shareholders are bringing to CSCO. (I would daresay they are damaging thier own company.) Consider the cost of lost business if Cisco pulled out... and also consider that if Cisco did, someone else will surely step in to sell their own hardware.

      Again, I say... Cisco is not in the business of telling governments how to run their affairs. They are simply selling equipment. If that equipment is allowing Cisco's customer to do something nefarious, well... you can claim they are an accesory if that makes you feel good. I say they are simply Maximizing Shareholder Value.

      --
      The problem with socialism is that they always run out of other people's money. - Margaret Thatcher
    13. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1
      Some presume that raising an issue like this will make the issue snowball on the Cisco board and make them roll over and say "OK China, we won't sell you any more equipment until you respect human rights."

      I say, with all due respect, to those of you that really think that is going to happen... that you're out of your friggin' minds.

      If you think this is true because it's unlikely that the proposal will pass, then say so. (IMO, it probably is unlikely.)

      However, if it were to pass, then the board would be legally obliged to "roll over" and act as the owners of the company direct.

      Again, I say... Cisco is not in the business of telling governments how to run their affairs.

      Again, Cisco is in whatever business its shareholders say it's in. Again, what constitutes "shareholder value" is determined by the shareholders, not by you.

    14. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by cevnet · · Score: 1

      So you would have applauded IBM 70 years ago? What would you call that? A keen eye for business?

    15. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by divide+overflow · · Score: 1

      > It's not Cisco's prerogative to try and tell ANY government how to draw up policy... all they need to do is keep selling hardware... at a profit.

      You mean Cisco doesn't have lobbyists that try to tell OUR government how to draw up policy? Really?

      > If a couple shareholders don't like it, buy them out and tell them to move on. Seriously.

      Look, the shareholders own the company and they have the right AND responsibility to tell them how they want it run. If you don't like it, tough. If they don't want to support totalitarian regimes don't blame them for having a conscience.

      Nikita Khrushchev famously claimed that the Americans would one day sell them the rope by which they would hang us. But they didn't embrace Capitalism as has China, so perhaps it will be China that fulfills his prophesy.

    16. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by gilroy · · Score: 1
      Blockquoth the poster:

      what's the phrase? "Maximizing Shareholder Value".

      Fair enough. But not all value is monetary value. The shareholders of Cisco get to decide what value they wish to receive. Perhaps they receive value from knowing that the company they own (and it is the shareholders who own it) does not help Communist nations suppress free expression. That might be worth a lot to them, in fact. In which case, it's perfectly reasonable for the shareholders to trade dollar value for that value -- if indeed this will cost dollars (an assumption which I think is, in the long term, uncertain at best).

      This is exactly the way it's supposed to work. If the activist shareholders can't convince their fellows to vote a majority of stock behind their proposal, it goes down. Then probably the activists dump their stock -- though they might remain, in order to have a chance to raise the issue again. If they can bring the others on board, then it should go through. That's how democracy works, after all. It might be reasonable that the Chinese aren't too up on the concept, but it's shocking to see how many in the so-called free world seem threatened by this exercise of democracy.
    17. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by gilroy · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Blockquoth the poster:

      Again, I say... Cisco is not in the business of telling governments how to run their affairs.

      And again, this is not what's going on. If this passes, Cisco isn't telling China not to censor. It's telling China that Cisco won't be a part of it.


      also consider that if Cisco did, someone else will surely step in to sell their own hardware

      This is the convenient cop-out that often allows people to justify their participation in the nefarious deeds of others. Maybe "someone else" would sell the routers. Heck, there'd be a market, right? But neither Cisco nor Cisco's shareholders are responsible for what "someone else" does. They are responsible for what Cisco does. That's what is at issue here.

      If Cisco bowed out and "someone else" stepped in, well, at the very least, the routers would be more expensive (because the supply is smaller, as the major supplier is not selling). This impacts the Chinese policy, at least a little. Maybe at some point someone in China would decide that the monetary cost wasn't worth it. Meanwhile, activists would see that their policy could work, and might use a similar one to force the "someone else" to stop working with China, too. As well, it's not outrageous to think that a "boycott complicits" movement will lead to local governments and universities and so on buying only from companies that don't aid in Chinese censorship. And bam! Now Cisco is deriving an actual monetary benefit from their policy.

      It's not as cut-and-dried as you want to make it seem. The process seems in fact to be handling the concerns of the shareholders quite well -- at least, until the execs at Cisco get the SEC to allow them to muzzle the proposal.

      But then, that would be ironically appropriate, wouldn't it?

      Dance with the Devil long enough and you grow cloven feet, too.
    18. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by fermion · · Score: 1
      I, as a plantation owner, do not engage in slave trade. I merely work with a headhunter to engage on site staff, and then feed and clothe said staff in exchange for labor. In fact, my headhunter assure me that most of the men and women on my plantation come of thier own free will in exchange for a payment to thier family. My staff are saints, giving of themselves so their family will not starve! Am I to stop in this legal practice, and let the families starve? Anyway, we give them all they need. Money would do them no good and hurt my profits. And if I cut them loose, how are they to eat? Where will they live?

      I am a simple retailer. I contract with a service to supply custodians. I make the service promise to use only legal labor, and comply with all laws. If they don't, there is a process to investigate the matter, and if the allegations are true, help the contractor comply. I certainly understand that the demand for undocmented workers crete dangerous conditions for those workers,and may well further expose the country to terrorist threats. However, i can't really afford to pay any more for custodial staff than I already do, and cannot be held liable for the documentaiotn of the staff, because, as I said, i contract that out. The documentation of such staff does not affect the stock price, so we don't worry about it.

      Notice the discussion is not over because I never mentioned that the holocaust was a way to maximize jobs for proper looking people.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    19. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by doc+modulo · · Score: 1

      Excellent post!

      Short term share-value thinking is what causes big corporate Enron type bankruptcy cases. It also shows stupid people in charge of your company's decisions.

      Mod up insightful please.

      --
      - -- Truth addict for life.
    20. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by shmlco · · Score: 1
      Regardless of whether a new Cicso-China policy is a good idea or not, the executives are indisputably PLAYING DIRTY POOL trying to BLOCK A VOTE like this.

      Yes, but to give credit where credit is due, there's a very good chance the board may have a better feel for the possible outcomes.

      Say someone sells the shareholders a sob story on "human rights" while they're all worked up over the news, the shareholders get all outraged, vote, and pass the measure. That being the case, then there's a significant chance that China could dump them and, on hearing that news, the very next day the market takes out 30% of the stock's value.

      Now some other countries see this, wonder when Cisco is going to interfere with them, and announce they're dropping their orders as well. Now Cisco truly tanks, the vultures rush in, and poof! No more Cisco.

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    21. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by thjayoromanov · · Score: 1

      Cisco is american right? All the ideology-talking just disappears whenever money is envolved? oh..wait..

    22. Re:Cisco is not a business of social activism. by lifespan · · Score: 0

      If there was huge profits in cold pressing high grade oil from newborn babies, would you want the company you have shares in to leap into that market?

      --
      -- Howto: Get +5 (1) Whine about M$ (2) Namedrop Gentoo (3) Casually Abuse Mods (4) Namedrop Early Computer Model
  8. Pretty useless petition by jurt1235 · · Score: 0

    Did the people writing the petition not follow the latest news??? Cisco is using even in the US every means possible to deny people rights, see http://it.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/07/29/185 0234&tid=99&tid=172&tid=123&tid=218

    Somebody finds something bad about your product, and you sue him, try to stop him from talking?
    Ok, maybe Lynn did not use the handiest way to present it, but still, I think it is just freedom of speech.
    If this would have been about a building where you work or live in, and the builder keeps information under wraps about a possible danger (think for example asbestos), the builder gets sued and convicted in the end. The whistle blower will be heralded (Ok, recognized at least).

    And they expect this company to respect human rights? Good joke, they will open a lab in China and help them, that is closer to the possibilities.

    --

    My wife's sketchblog Blob[p]: Gastrono-me
  9. geez, by Heem · · Score: 0

    This is as bad as blaming Gun manufacturers for murders, and blaming McDonalds because you are fat.

    --
    Don't Tread on Me
    1. Re:geez, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and blaming grokster for piracy?

    2. Re:geez, by poopdeville · · Score: 1

      Not really... this would be more like blaming gun manufacturers for selling to the Chinese. And that would be blameworthy, since, presumably, gun manufacturers would realize that the Chinese are going to use their guns to oppress one billion people.

      --
      After all, I am strangely colored.
    3. Re:geez, by Whafro · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, if you're talking guns and murders, it would be more like this conversation between a gun salesman and a customer:

      Customer: "I'm looking for a gun, can you suggest one?"
      Salesman: "Okay, well, what do you need to use it for?"
      Customer: "My wife has been having an affair, and I need to off the bastard who's getting on her."
      Salesman: "Oh, good, well, I have the perfect choice right over here..."

    4. Re:geez, by TheGavster · · Score: 4, Funny

      The interesting similarity is this pair of conversations:

      China: I need a router.
      Cisco: What sort of router?
      China: A router that can filter all mention of free thought and democracy.
      Cisco: Ah, you want the UberWhip9000.

      Parent: I need a router.
      Best Buy: What sort of router?
      Parent: A router that can block off large portions of the internet.
      Best Buy: Ah, you want the SuperRouter9000.

      So, really, the Chinese government is one giant safety mom, with a billion kids. That minivan must get really poor gas milage.

      --
      "Because Science" is one step from "Because old book". Try "Because of my experiment testing my falsifiable assertion".
    5. Re:geez, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh bullshit. This isn't simply a case of a company passively selling equipment, on bids this size there are huge technical hurdles to overcome.

      I am qualified to talk on this - I work for a company whose name will go unmentioned - no not Cisco - who has made a bid on some of the firewall stuff. I've seen plenty of internal company documents on how we'll alter an existing solution pretty radically to deal with the 'china firewall' requirements. The level and granularity of the filtering they are talking about is many magnitudes bigger than *ANYTHING* out there already and ANYTHING likely to be ever deployed elsewhere. And some of the sorts of filtering they are talking about will never be needed anywhere else.

      As an analogy, assume the gun manufacturers started making their guns specifically suited for murder.

      ac
      --

  10. plausible deniability by SuperBanana · · Score: 3, Funny
    claiming that it already has a comprehensive human rights policy in place and that 'Cisco does not participate in any way in any censorship activities in the People's Republic of China

    Oh, of course they don't. But I bet they help wash the dishes. Excerpt from the Chinese translation of the Cisco Stonewaller 3000:

    Dishwashing function:

    The Stonewaller 3000 features extensive "dishwashing" capabilities. For example, if you would like to block all "dishes" from a certain "dish maker", execute:

    dishwash add [dishmaker's website URL] [peasant | party member | chairman] (allow||deny) [notify]

    Note: notify sends notification upon use of "dirty" "dishes" to assist you in maintaining clean "cupboards".

    ------

    On a more serious note- Cisco just has to maintain some plausible deniability. Clothing companies have this down pat. They set up a policy that looks great to consumers, and then promptly hire a subcontractor who runs sweat shops.

    When a human rights company figures out what is going on, it's nearly impossible for them to come up with hard evidence management at the company knew about the subcontractor's sweat shops; the company releases a press release saying "gosh, we're so sorry, this is all the fault of our contractor." The contractor is fired, the contractor disappears off the face of the earth, and a new contractor with a different name pops up and suddenly out of the middle of nowhere, scores a big contract with a famous clothing company.

  11. Corporation's Ethical Responsibily. by Marc_Hawke · · Score: 0

    I see a lot of comments saying "Cisco's job is to make a profit." Infact, ANY time there's a story about some company doing a TERRIBLE thing, it's always the same answer. "If it makes money it's okay."

    Well, that kind of 'anything for a buck' attitude is exactly what gets us the DMCA. It's what gets all DRM bills passed through Congress. It's exactly the opposite of what Free (speech) software is about.

    It's okay to make a buck, but you have to make sure you're not causing harm to society in the process.

    I think we need a change in corporate responsibility. Don't know how it's going to happen (except for Stakeholder's taking a stand, like in this article) but we need corporations to think of how they can better the world, and NOT just how they can better their profit margin.

    --
    --Welcome to the Realm of the Hawke--
    1. Re:Corporation's Ethical Responsibily. by burns210 · · Score: 1

      Cisco is NOT RESPONSIBLE for how its products are used and they shouldn't be. A company should not be a moral judge on my use of their product. /. is all about this when gun control comes up and the X gun company is sued because one of their guns was used in a murder. The gun company wasn't the one that pulled the trigger, as long as the gun was sold properly(often the reseller's responsibility, not the manufacturer's) then they are no way liable. It is the moron that killed a person that is responsible for his or her actions.

      China is a sovereign state. Like it or not, it is their playground and they make the rules. Cisco can be morally against it, but as a publicly traded company, they don't get to pass judgement on how their products get used(or even get to know, sometimes).

      You don't have to like it, Cisco doesn't have to like it. But you can't just decide one day that a company has to determine if the use of their product is "ok" with their personal views and should be sold to the customer or not. The customer does what they want, period.

    2. Re:Corporation's Ethical Responsibily. by jjhlk · · Score: 1

      Well, you can trust thousands of different entities (the companies) to be responsible for human rights and such, or you can trust a single entity (government) to enforce human rights in companies. Furthermore, in one case the shareholders vote on what is responsible in their companies (such that each company could have a different idea of what responsibility is), or you could have the citizens of a country (or their representatives) vote for one responsibility is overall (within the municipality/state/federal system).

      I'd go for having the citizen's government wield its power, and let the companies maximize profit. But if the shareholders want to be benevolant too, then let them; however, the fact that they get the opportunity to do so means the government might not be doing its job.

    3. Re:Corporation's Ethical Responsibily. by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1
    4. Re:Corporation's Ethical Responsibily. by rob_squared · · Score: 1

      Don't you see? It's not that it's "ok" to do anything for a buck. It's that we realize that someone is guaranteed to do anything for a buck. It's not always the same person and it's not always the same reason. People are cynical, well, because, we have every reason to be.

      --
      I don't get it.
  12. We have... by Kjella · · Score: 1

    ...a "great firewall" here too, sorta. It is used by all the major ISPs on a voluntary basis, blocking access to child porn sites. This is according to norwegian law and norwegian justice system for norwegian users. It is not like this is anything complex, it is essentially a firewall. The point is, in a democratic state the same tool is used differently than in a communist state. The general slashdotism is that P2P is a tool, and so is the "great firewall". Perhaps Cisco's relationship with China goes further and could be considered aiding and abetting breaches of human rights, but I don't think delivering the tool itself is enough. That would put a lot of suppliers of various goods in the same bin at least.

    Kjella

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    1. Re:We have... by cnettel · · Score: 1
      I think this is an important point to make, and this is what makes this stuff so hard. Is simply providing a router with filtering and logging capabilities a part of "aiding the Chinese government"? Should they actually spend money on the (somewhat) futile attempt to sell one set of firmware on the Chinese routers, and another set on the domestic ones, where there may be legitimate uses (filtering and control of the use in a corporate network, for example).

      If a search engine actively filters content, it's one thing. If the chinese proxies mangle the results to exclude content, they are (obviously) not responsible. Likewise, if it's just a matter of using the general flexible Cisco features for a repressionist purpose, I wouldn't blame Cisco. Drawing the line here can get quite tricky, of course, as a new general feature could be introduced after requests from "an important customer"...

  13. Et tu, Google et Yahoo by El+Cubano · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So does Google and so does Yahoo!. But then, Google is held in such high regard here that we can only say such things about them in hushed tones.

    1. Re:Et tu, Google et Yahoo by ultranova · · Score: 0, Troll

      GOOGLE HELPS CHINESE GOVERNMENT TO CENSOR THE INTERNET FOR THE DETRIMENT OF CHINESE PEOPLE!!!

      There, are you happy now ?

      Random crap to bypass the lame lameness filter: Ellie had a little chicken, its beard as white as snow.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    2. Re:Et tu, Google et Yahoo by n3owj · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      So much so that my "Ask Slashdot" about Google alternatives was ignored. My email asking why my question was ignored was ignored too. I am boycotting Google because they invested in Broadband over Powelines which will destroy long and mediun range radio communications.

      --
      gsm@mendelson.com Jerusalem Israel
    3. Re:Et tu, Google et Yahoo by Frank+T.+Lofaro+Jr. · · Score: 1

      You mean "TO" the detriment, not "FOR".

      --
      Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
    4. Re:Et tu, Google et Yahoo by Frank+T.+Lofaro+Jr. · · Score: 1

      You're using a Google link to provide evidence against Google.

      Isn't that ironic, don't you think?

      --
      Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
    5. Re:Et tu, Google et Yahoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ironic?

      No, it's fitting.

      They're starting to slip more than a little on their don't be evil stance--they surely can't keep everyone happy, of course, but at least IMHO they're not quite up to snuff just now.

      It's not a foregone conclusion that they'll sink too very far into "evil" territory. But I have a feeling that as time goes on, they'll wind up hand-in-hand with all the other companies whose hands are dirty. But that's just my guess.

  14. Key Phrase as to why this doesn't even matter by WebHostingGuy · · Score: 1, Interesting

    From the article:

    Even if it came to a vote and passed, the resolution would not be binding on Cisco's executives. But "it sends a strong message to management, and it gets across the sentiment of shareholders in a way that writing a letter can't do," says Wolfe.

    Big whip. It's not binding and is just paper. As for the reasoning that management cares what the shareholder's think...well that argument has been going on for decades.

    Also from the article:

    "Can companies just claim a total lack of political responsibility in how their technology is used in all instances? It's something that companies should be thinking about when they sell their technologies around the world."

    Yes, they can. Companies are out to make a profit not a political statement. Investors, i.e., the shareholders, want a monetary return, not a political return on their investment. As an investor in Cisco I would sell immediately if I knew Cisco was going to quit selling to one of the largest markets in existence because they were going to make a political statment (in fact I would sell short and make quite a bit when this news hit the street as well).

    There is nothing that Cisco itself can do change human rights in China. In order for that to happen the people of China have to want the change; really want the change. If tomorrow Cisco stopped selling to China Juniper or another company would just take up the slack. Only if all companies did this would that then make an impact. (And yes, I know you have to start somewhere, but why don't you start with the people in China first?)

    Political mongering at corporations has been around for decades and it will not go away. But what a waste of time to fight over a non-binding non-effort.

    --
    Quality Hosting e3 Servers
    1. Re:Key Phrase as to why this doesn't even matter by poopdeville · · Score: 1
      If tomorrow Cisco stopped selling to China Juniper or another company would just take up the slack.

      I was waiting for somebody to say this. It is utter non-sense to avoid moral responsibility because other people (hypothetically) wouldn't. Yes, somebody might take up the slack. But then you wouldn't be morally responsible. Would you justify being a hitman by saying that if you didn't kill, somebody else would? Presumably not. Then how can you justify actively participating in silencing a billion people?

      --
      After all, I am strangely colored.
    2. Re:Key Phrase as to why this doesn't even matter by jvagner · · Score: 1

      Companies are out to make a profit not a political statement.

      Yeah.. a baseline of human morality has no place in the world of business, which is, you know, conducted by humans. Establishing a minimum context for the behavior of humans just sucks. Money is pure, the pursuit of it is pure.

    3. Re:Key Phrase as to why this doesn't even matter by WebHostingGuy · · Score: 1

      You misunderstand that statement. The statement is not about morality, but showing that the attempt at morality (or lack thereof) will have zero impact. The point of the petition (at least I hope its there point otherwise it is a waste of time) is to fundamentally change human rights in China. The people behind this petition wish to change the human rights in China by "denying" China equipment they need to do this. This is where the argument is flawed and this statement comes in. In a market where there is more than one vendor unless you have all agreeing to no supply the Chinese with the hardware anything you do at one company will not have an impact.

      And, no, as a shareholder in Cisco I am not morally responsible for human rights violations. I being an owner am not actually making those decisions. I, as a shareholder, elected people to run the company and they make those decisions. If I don't like it I can elect a different board of directors or sell my ownership, but in the way the stock market work and capital ownership works I don't have day to day control and I really question whether I am morally responsible for anything I don't control. It's like saying I am morally responsible for what actions the President of the United States does if I voted for him. Does it make me responsible? No, don't think so.

      As for the hitman analogy, that is wrong as well. You are trying to compare an analogy where I would be the actor in the situation to a situation where I am at least twice removed (once by the management of Cisco and another by the quote unquote legal government of China by which the people of China want or tolerate).

      --
      Quality Hosting e3 Servers
    4. Re:Key Phrase as to why this doesn't even matter by gilroy · · Score: 1
      Blockquoth the poster:

        (And yes, I know you have to start somewhere, but why don't you start with the people in China first?)

      Hmmm. How about, because they're hard to reach, because of censorship embodied in the Internet infrastructure? How about, because as a citizen in the US, I don't have a lot of reach with Chinese citizens but I can have an impact on an American company?

      Investors, i.e., the shareholders, want a monetary return, not a political return on their investment.

      Who are you to declare what investors want? You can say what you want, and that's valid. If the majority of shareholders agree with you, well, then this proposal will die and Cisco can go on doing what's it's doing. But if a majority disagree with you on what they want, why the heck should your prescription hold? If only there were some way to officially guage shareholder opinion on this... Something that allows each shareholder to concretely express his/her opinion, maybe in proportional to how much stock they own...

      Oh, wait. There is such a process. It's called a shareholder vote. But for some reason the Cisco board doesn't want this to happen. Maybe they're afraid that investors want them to do the right thing, even if it costs some opportunities.
    5. Re:Key Phrase as to why this doesn't even matter by ScuxxletButt · · Score: 1
      This is where the argument is flawed and this statement comes in. In a market where there is more than one vendor unless you have all agreeing to no supply the Chinese with the hardware anything you do at one company will not have an impact.

      Maybe, but at last this stockholder's investment dollar is not going to support it. One vote doesn't make a difference either, so why bother voting?

      It's like saying I am morally responsible for what actions the President of the United States does if I voted for him. Does it make me responsible? No, don't think so.

      Sure it does. He didn't hide his agenda when running for office and if you voted for him, you put your political power behind his statements. If you voted for Bush, you have no room to complain. You voted for war and policies based around oil and you got what you asked for.

      It's the same with these people using their voting stock to say something. Even if it goes to a vote and they lose, they have made their intentions clear. Therefore it's the people who vote to let Cisco keep providing the tools of oppression who have the responsability of helping to censor a population.

      I don't buy Nike and I don't buy from Wal-Mart. Will other people? Sure they will. I cannot make a choice for them. If they want to ignore the fact that the product they are buying supports sweatshops that employ 12 year-olds working 16 hours a day, there is not a whole lot I can do about it. I just know that I am not supplying the money to do this. I opt out.

    6. Re:Key Phrase as to why this doesn't even matter by WebHostingGuy · · Score: 1

      Sure it does.

      By this logic, if someone voted for Clinton in the past is morally responsible for the Monica Lewinski affair. If someone voted for FDR during WWII they would be morally responsible for the atomic bombing in Japan even though Truman gave the order? If so, then because the President is the Commander and Chief are they responsible for any war crimes committed by soldiers during the war. After all the President was in charge of the military.

      Would those who against FDR/Truman be held not liable because their canidate lost the election? And anyone who voted for Nixon would be morally responsible for Watergate? And anyone who voted for Carter would be morally responsible for anyone held hostage in the Iran Crisis?

      Exercising your right to vote one way or another does not absolve responsiblity to the person you are voting for, nor does it make you responsible for another person's actions. Granted in this case you can say you get what you voted for but it does not personally make you personally responsible for actions you are not directly taking.

      If I shoot someone I am responsible. If I let a tree grow and then leave a stick on the ground am I morally responsible if someone pokes someone else with the stick. I know that sticks can be used this way, but I didn't do the action. Could it be forseen that someone might poke a stick at someone? Yes, but just because there is a possiblity that something could happen automatically make me morally responsible? If so, then everyone is responsible for everything as all possibilities are eventually possible. If I vote for someone and they kill someone would I then be morally responsible for the death? Even though I did not personally kill the person?

      Therefore it's the people who vote to let Cisco keep providing the tools of oppression who have the responsability of helping to censor a population.

      You miss the point. Even if they win it does nothing. And that's the original point of this thread. It's a non-binding resolution. It does nothing if they win, it does nothing if they lose. Putting it to a vote is a waste of time and resources to begin with.

      --
      Quality Hosting e3 Servers
    7. Re:Key Phrase as to why this doesn't even matter by WebHostingGuy · · Score: 1

      From here:

      Noun 1.investor investor - someone who commits capital in order to gain financial returns

      Not, political change, financial return. That being said I would guarantee that 99.99% (or more) of all people who have bought Cisco stock don't own the stock because of Cisco's political motives. Do you own stock? If so, did you purchase the stock because you sought social change? Or are you trying to make a little money?

      My main point in starting the thread was that this doesn't matter is because even if the shareholder's win they don't do anything. It's a non-binding resolution. That tells me they aren't even serious about it.

      As for reaching the Chinese people I have never had a problem. I have had multiple Chinese clients in a wide variey of businesses and have never encountered censorship in reaching them via postal, telephone or electronic communications. I believe that if the Chinese truly wanted change they would effect the change themselves.

      --
      Quality Hosting e3 Servers
    8. Re:Key Phrase as to why this doesn't even matter by poopdeville · · Score: 1
      And, no, as a shareholder in Cisco I am not morally responsible for human rights violations. I being an owner am not actually making those decisions. I, as a shareholder, elected people to run the company and they make those decisions. If I don't like it I can elect a different board of directors or sell my ownership, but in the way the stock market work and capital ownership works I don't have day to day control and I really question whether I am morally responsible for anything I don't control. It's like saying I am morally responsible for what actions the President of the United States does if I voted for him. Does it make me responsible? No, don't think so.

      You are morally responsible for crimes committed by the President, if you knew he was going to commit them when you voted. And you are morally responsible for human rights violations if you support a company that helps commit them. You know full well what these routers are for. They're going to be used to silence a billion people, and you just want to profit from it.

      Regarding the hitman analogy: the disanalogy you mentioned is irrelevant. If you feel that you must, consider an analogy where you help finance a hitman's operations. Should you finance a hitman because it's a competitive market and you'll make a profit?(Hint: no.)

      --
      After all, I am strangely colored.
    9. Re:Key Phrase as to why this doesn't even matter by ScuxxletButt · · Score: 1
      By this logic, if someone voted for Clinton in the past is morally responsible for the Monica Lewinski affair.

      I don't recall Clinton saying he was going to have an affair during his campaign. So no. They had no idea this was going to happen, they are not responsible. It's not a good example anyway. An affair is not really on the same scale as censoring billions of people. Now Bush, on the other hand, said he was going to continue his war mongering, so if you vote for him, you are partialy responsible.

      Cisco sold their product with full knowledge that it was going to be used to censor people, therefore they have some responsibility.

      If I let a tree grow and then leave a stick on the ground am I morally responsible if someone pokes someone else with the stick.


      No. Unless you intended that growth to be used in that way.

      It's more like this... If you know that the shoes you're about to buy were made by a ten year old forced into wage slavery and you buy them anyway, then you share the responsibility. If you buy them and two years later you find out, you share no responsability, unless you buy them again with that knowledge.

      So, if you invest in Cisco knowing that they are knowingly selling equipmen that is being used for cesnsorship and you don't use your voting power to try and change their policies, then you hold some of that responsability.

      You miss the point. Even if they win it does nothing.

      It does a lot. It makes Cisco answer questions they may might wish to avoid. It's a step in the right direction. It doesn't change everthing right away. But, with your logic, if you can't change everything right away, it's not worth trying because it does nothing. School must have sucked for you.

    10. Re:Key Phrase as to why this doesn't even matter by WebHostingGuy · · Score: 1

      Cisco sold their product with full knowledge that it was going to be used to censor people, therefore they have some responsibility.

      But this just leads to a silly portioning of responsiblity. What if I bought my shares two years ago. Do I now get a free pass? Under this you are saying yes. (Assuming the deal wasn't going on then.) So, anyone who now buys Cisco is morally liable but everyone else gets a free ride? Some investors are morally liable but others aren't? Am I morally liable because I now hold on to my shares? What about someone who bought because they know Cisco grants millions of dollars of charity each year. Are they morally responsible for that or for the censorship? What about the person who buys a mutual fund and the fund buys Cisco now? Are they responsible? What about the person who buys a Linksys router? Linksys is owned by Cisco and therefore they are supplying money to a corporation who is selling the equipment to China. What about the charity which accepts a Linksys product? Are they supporting this censorship because they made the concious decision to use a product from a corporation supplying equipment to China? This is just an undefinable slippery slope. You can't give a black and white answer to any of these questions because there will always be exceptions because the owners of shares of stock are not the ones committing the censorship in this case. That's why they are not morally responsible.

      Under your definition if you have any say in something you are therefore morally responsible. I don't believe that. I believe you have to have the power of the situation and have to be the one making the action in order to be morally responsible.

      But, with your logic, if you can't change everything right away, it's not worth trying because it does nothing.

      I totally don't understand this. If nothing happens, then what changes? We "feel" better because we voiced our opinion? I'm for real change, not for false contrivances. And that's all this is. It is not imposing real change, nor is it a step in the right direction. It's just media attention. And back to my original point, if they (the shareholders who brought this petition) really meant this they would not have made it totally optional (i.e., non-binding).

      --
      Quality Hosting e3 Servers
    11. Re:Key Phrase as to why this doesn't even matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ya don't get it.

      Shareholders are the owners. If the owners of a company want their company to go in a certain direction then who are you to tell the owners they can't do what they want to do?

      I'm a conservative and this is the market working as it's supposed to work. Owners run their company how they want to. It's a pity that some psuedo-conservatives seem to think they can interfer with how a company is run all in the name of conservatism. What a bunch of losers.

    12. Re:Key Phrase as to why this doesn't even matter by ScuxxletButt · · Score: 1

      What if I bought my shares two years ago. Do I now get a free pass?

      It's all in what you know. The moment you know what the money you invest is being used for something morally wrong, you then might say you have the moral responsibility to pull your investment or leverage it for a change.

      What about the charity which accepts a Linksys product?

      Some things are unavoidable, but that does not make a wrong a right.

      Under your definition if you have any say in something you are therefore morally responsible... I believe you have to have the power of the situation and have to be the one making the action in order to be morally responsible.

      Wouldn't having a say in something would be a definition of having power of a situation? Are you saying that people who sat and watched the Holocaust happen and did and said nothing hold absolutely no responsibility? I think they hold some responsibility.

      How you spend your money has a huge impact in other places. You are right in saying that there are no black and white answers, but that does not abosolve responsibility. No one is innocent. Not me(just did a rather large Cisco install), not you, no one. However, knowing how your actions impact other people means you can change what you can and make up for what you can't.

      It is not imposing real change, nor is it a step in the right direction. It's just media attention.

      Just the fact that this discussion is happening means that the actions of these stock holders is affecting change. Talking is the first step to changing anything. Just because Cisco hasn't stopped selling everything right away doesn't mean that this action was useless. Media attention is power.

    13. Re:Key Phrase as to why this doesn't even matter by poopdeville · · Score: 1
      People like you are what's wrong with America. You're completely spineless. You're "for change" but are unwilling to do anything because you don't think anything will happen. Brilliant. Amazing. You can predict the future. You know this resolution will fail. You won't vote for change because you know nobody will notice that a large percentage of the shareholders are against oppressing a billion people. The media won't notice that and raise a big stink about it and they certainly won't help change anything. So why bother trying?

      Because it is in your power to try. Indeed, it is your moral duty to do so.

      --
      After all, I am strangely colored.
    14. Re:Key Phrase as to why this doesn't even matter by WebHostingGuy · · Score: 1

      So, in reality we need more people to bring forth non-binding resolutions. Yes, a non-binding resolution will change everything...no, wait it does "NOTHING". Non-binding, i.e., optional. What kind of impact does a optional, ignore whenever you want, resolution change anything for a multi-billion dollar corporation?

      No, the problem with people is that they say they want change only to talk the talk, and not walk the walk.

      I'm for change, not just b.s. resolutions which don't do anything but grab media attention for an organization who really doesn't want to change anything. If they wanted to make a real change they would have made it non-binding.

      --
      Quality Hosting e3 Servers
    15. Re:Key Phrase as to why this doesn't even matter by poopdeville · · Score: 1
      So, in reality we need more people to bring forth non-binding resolutions. Yes, a non-binding resolution will change everything...no, wait it does "NOTHING". Non-binding, i.e., optional. What kind of impact does a optional, ignore whenever you want, resolution change anything for a multi-billion dollar corporation?

      Since you have resorted to repeating yourself, I shall do the same.

      People like you are what's wrong with America. You're completely spineless. You're "for change" but are unwilling to do anything because you don't think anything will happen. Brilliant. Amazing. You can predict the future. You know this resolution will fail. You won't vote for change because you know nobody will notice that a large percentage of the shareholders are against oppressing a billion people. The media won't notice that and raise a big stink about it and they certainly won't help change anything. So why bother trying?

      Because it is in your power to try. Indeed, it is your moral duty to do so.

      --
      After all, I am strangely colored.
    16. Re:Key Phrase as to why this doesn't even matter by WebHostingGuy · · Score: 1

      The only part repeated was the part where you don't understand that the resolution has no authority to do anything. You don't seem to understand the difference between affecting real change and just talking about it. You call me spineless because I think a non-binding resolution is crap.

      You're right -- I would never vote for something which doesn't do anything. It's a waste of my time. Answer this though -- if the resolution passes what has it done to stop the situation in China? What impact will it have on China? What impact will it have on the management? Come back in one year and see what has changed. You can have the last word. Bye.

      --
      Quality Hosting e3 Servers
  15. If you own Cisco stock by ReidMaynard · · Score: 1

    and feel Cisco helps violate human rights (and you find this intolerable) just sell your shares.

    --
    -- www.globaltics.net

    Political discussion for a new world

    1. Re:If you own Cisco stock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, and if you live in a country that is seemingly randomly abducting and torturing your neighbors, just move, no big deal. Who cares?

      Retreating when confronted with a hard issue that deals with the very core of your belief system is a great idea. That sure gets a lot done to fix the problem...

      Lets just give up our humanity while we're at it.

    2. Re:If you own Cisco stock by TheGavster · · Score: 1

      If a significant portion of Cisco shareholders expressed their dissatisfaction with human rights policy by selling their shares, the stock price would drop and the executives would notice. The best part is, no one will try and shoot you when you post the shares for sale.

      --
      "Because Science" is one step from "Because old book". Try "Because of my experiment testing my falsifiable assertion".
    3. Re:If you own Cisco stock by kcbrown · · Score: 2, Insightful
      If a significant portion of Cisco shareholders expressed their dissatisfaction with human rights policy by selling their shares, the stock price would drop and the executives would notice.

      But if you're selling your shares as a result of Cisco's human rights policies, who do you think is buying them? Right: someone who doesn't care about Cisco's human rights policies.

      So if all the shareholders who care about this issue sold their Cisco stock, the end result afterwards is that none of the shareholders would care about the issue anymore. And since the corporation will claim to have a responsibility to its current shareholders, it will continue violating human rights as long as it's profitable to do so.

      So by selling your Cisco stock, you're likely to make the problem worse. You have far more control (even if it's still miniscule) over Cisco as someone who actually owns Cisco stock than as someone who doesn't.

      --
      Use 'slashdot stuff' in the subject line in any email you send me if you want to get past the spam filter.
    4. Re:If you own Cisco stock by The_Wilschon · · Score: 1

      But if you're selling your shares as a result of Cisco's human rights policies, who do you think is buying them? Right: someone who doesn't care about Cisco's human rights policies.

      I guess this reveals something I don't understand about the stock market....

      If I own some stock, and decide I want to sell it, I don't have to look around to find somebody who wants to buy it, do I? Stock isn't bought and sold on ebay, transferred from buyer to seller... It seems that the total amount of owned stock must not be constant. But then, who pays you when you sell stock? If it's not somebody who is buying it from you, then is it the stock exchange? is it the company? who?

      My best guess is that it's the company, in which case, if all the shareholders who cared about human rights sold their stock, it could (depending on the number) seriously hurt the company, and most likely, a significant portion of those shares would not simply be snapped up by someone else.

      So, assuming that I've figured out this stock market thing, selling your shares wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing. However, I suspect that it is true that by keeping your shares, you will have more control over Cisco, as you said.

      --
      SIGSEGV caught, terminating

      wait... not that kind of sig.
    5. Re:If you own Cisco stock by JazzHarper · · Score: 1

      If I own some stock, and decide I want to sell it, I don't have to look around to find somebody who wants to buy it, do I? Stock isn't bought and sold on ebay, transferred from buyer to seller... It seems that the total amount of owned stock must not be constant. But then, who pays you when you sell stock? If it's not somebody who is buying it from you, then is it the stock exchange? is it the company? who?

      The stock is transferred from seller to buyer. In general, it does not go to the exchange or the company. So, yes, it is a lot like eBay and the total amount of owned stock does remain constant, most of the time.

      Only by keeping the shares do you have any influence, however infinitesimal, on the governance of the corporation.

    6. Re:If you own Cisco stock by The_Wilschon · · Score: 1

      So what happens when a lot of people all sell their stock in one company at one time and noone is willing to buy it? Can they just not sell?

      --
      SIGSEGV caught, terminating

      wait... not that kind of sig.
    7. Re:If you own Cisco stock by JazzHarper · · Score: 1

      So what happens when a lot of people all sell their stock in one company at one time and noone is willing to buy it? Can they just not sell?

      Assuming these are "at market" orders, the "ask" price will fall until it hits a "bid" price. If there really is no one willing to buy at any price, the price falls to zero, theoretically.

      This does happen on thinly-traded stocks. If there are very few buyers (or sellers), the stock is illiquid and its price can fall (or rise) very suddenly.

      When a company has liabilities that exceed its revenues and assets, it is typically in bankruptcy and there may be no one willing to buy the shares. The price of the shares can very well fall to zero. At that point, the shareholder is faced with the task of disposing of the worthless shares so that he can claim a capital loss. Google for "worthless stock" for more info.

    8. Re:If you own Cisco stock by The_Wilschon · · Score: 1

      mkay thanks. I think I have a slightly better grasp of how stock works now.

      --
      SIGSEGV caught, terminating

      wait... not that kind of sig.
  16. They're missing the point by melted · · Score: 4, Informative

    Cisco does not engage in censorship. They simply make equipment which can be used to engage in censorship. Similarly to a company that makes matches that can be used for arson, or Proctor and Gamble whose Clorox bleach can be used as poison.

    There is no way to tell Chinese government what they can and can not do at this point. It would be nearly fatal to impose stiff tariffs, too. So bend over and hand the Chinese that bottle of vaseline.

    1. Re:They're missing the point by WebHostingGuy · · Score: 1

      And remember all the slashdotters and others who think when you make a product you should *not* be liable for what happens after you release it. Either Cisco is not responsible like everyone else, or everyone is responsible.

      --
      Quality Hosting e3 Servers
    2. Re:They're missing the point by eclectro · · Score: 1

      I think the distinction would be that the Matches primary purpose is not Arson, while the primary purpose of the Cisco Routers is censorship.

      To say otherwise is to deny the obvious. The kind of argument you make is "stick your head in the sand" .

      --
      Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
    3. Re:They're missing the point by superyanthrax · · Score: 1

      No, the primary purpose of the routers is not to act as censorship. The primary purpose of the routers is to redirect packets of information across networks, and to provide chokepoints of access where the information flow can be controlled. Censorship is the "control" that the Chinese government is applying. This is in fact not unique at all. Many companies and schools restrict heavily the internet that their users are allowed to access.

      Saying that Cisco is supporting censorship is like saying that Bram Cohen is a pirate.

    4. Re:They're missing the point by eclectro · · Score: 1

      I think making the comparison between companies and schools restricting the internet and the Chinese government censoring "Democracy" is ludicrous.

      I also suppose you think it's alright that those tanks rolled over those people in Tiananmen Square too??

      --
      Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
    5. Re:They're missing the point by Grym · · Score: 1

      Cisco does not engage in censorship. They simply make equipment which can be used to engage in censorship. Similarly to a company that makes matches that can be used for arson, or Proctor and Gamble whose Clorox bleach can be used as poison.

      But Cisco is knowingly and unapologetically aiding in in censorship. It's no mystery how China is using Cisco's products. Were this not the case, you might have a point.

      In light of this, your analogy becomes akin to a storeowner knowingly selling matches to an arsonist who is openly saying that he will use the matches he buys to commit arson. Sure, the owner can turn a blind eye to the consequences of his actions, but is that ethical? To take your other example, would it be ethical to sell chlorox to a customer in all seriousness telling you he's going to use it to poison another person?

      If your answer to either of the above questions is yes, you really need to re-evaluate your moral standards.

      Ultimately, Cisco is a collection of individuals who, like the rest of us, have obligations to to behave in a moral fashion. Even if a powerful entity such as China acting unjustly and cannot be deterred, how would that justify helping them?

      In all honesty, this is how the system is supposed to work. In public corporations, stockholders, as a collective, are intended to direct the actions of the company as they see fit. To ignore the stockholders opinions because of possibly reduced profits is a backwards (and dangerous) mindset.

      -Grym

    6. Re:They're missing the point by evilviper · · Score: 1
      It would be nearly fatal to impose stiff tariffs, too.

      That's absolutely ridiculous. In fact it would be VERY benefitial to impose stiff tarrifs. The trade gap is MASSIVE, and blocking Chinese-made products would bolster American manufacturing dramatically.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  17. Activists got an item on the Caterpillar agenda by michaelmalak · · Score: 2, Interesting
    My April 21, 2004 blog entry Caterpillar shareholder activists get Israel issue on shareholder meeting ballot:

    For some marginally good news for a change, as highlighted by jewishvoiceforpeace.org and corpwatch.org, according to an Apr. 15, 2004 Peoria Journal Star article:

    Activists protested Wednesday outside Caterpillar Inc.'s annual shareholders meeting in Chicago, but lost their bid to get the Peoria corporation to study the use of its equipment in razing Palestinian homes overseas.

    Stock owners defeated a proposal to determine whether the sale of bulldozers and other machinery to the Israel Defense Forces is consistent with Caterpillar's global code of business conduct. The Fortune 100 company's board opposed the measure.

    Caterpillar's new chairman and CEO, Jim Owens, repeated the company's position that it feels compassion for displaced families but can't police the use of its more than 2 million pieces of equipment worldwide.

    "After they've been sold, the owners of those machines determine how they're used," Owens told an audience of about 50 at the Northern Trust Building in Chicago's Loop. Some of the activists got inside the meeting because they or groups they represent own Caterpillar stock. Five of them spoke to board members before tentative voting results were announced; the measure earned support from about 4 percent of shareholders, which would allow it to be reintroduced next year.

    Liat Weingart, co-director of San Francisco-based Jewish Voice for Peace, said more than 50,000 people have lost their homes in demolitions that often have no relation to Israeli security. Some Palestinians have been buried alive, she said.

    Caterpillar is headquarted in Peoria, which is why the Peoria newspaper ran the story. I've been unable to locate any other newspaper running this story.

    The Peoria newspaper portrays it as a loss for the activists, when in fact it is a major victory (the 4% means it has to be discussed at next year's shareholder meeting) and represents a creative and practical means for effecting change in corporate behavior -- much more practical than street riots.

    As I've often stated, corporations should not be so large, last so long, and have Constitutional rights. However, if they have to be around, then the proposal contained in the conclusion of the seminal Small Is Beautiful for bridling corporations is good. Small is Beautiful says that since corporations are like mini-governments, run them as a democracy where all the stakeholders (all who are affected by the existence of the corporation, including investors but especially those who live near the corporation's activities) vote.

    Failing those two -- i.e. if we can't ban large corporations and if we can't have stakeholders vote on how large corporations should be run -- then participating in the existing corporate governance process -- namely buying stock and voting at shareholders meetings -- is the next best thing.

    This peaceful, legal alternative to reining in amoral powerful corporations has gone underreported.

    See also the previous UnderReported.com stories:

    1. Re:Activists got an item on the Caterpillar agenda by sensi_fr · · Score: 1

      ty for reporting this example of regained democracy, like you said this kind of virtuous example are underreported (coz people in charge want to keep their dictatorial statut).

      This Cisco story is somewhat similar to IBM helping the nazis in their extermination of millions of people by providing them early computers.
      For some people here that would just be: "They are just selling tools, not a bad thing, as far as they are giving me my dirty bucks" (sic)

      Best regards,
      Sensi

    2. Re:Activists got an item on the Caterpillar agenda by 11223 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Obviously the only way to achieve social responsibility is with more dead Jews! Because preventing Islamic Jihad and Hamas from tunneling into Israel to smuggle weapons would be just, like, so Nazi.

    3. Re:Activists got an item on the Caterpillar agenda by geekee · · Score: 1

      So, then the US govt. should stop supporting Israel as well, with military technology? What happens when you leave Israel defenseless against enemies who have sworn to destroy it.

      --
      Vote for Pedro
  18. We must put a stop to this! by supabeast! · · Score: 0, Troll
    1. Re:We must put a stop to this! by eclectro · · Score: 1


      Unfortunately, the coin has already been tossed. The problem at this point is that an economic blockade of China would be the same as taking a pistol to our own (economic) head. Not just because China fuels Walmart, but because China owns a substantial amount of our debt.

      --
      Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
  19. You, as a shareholder have a say too by drgonzo59 · · Score: 3, Insightful
    If their policy doesn't agree to what you believe the best way to protest is to sell your shares and invest in other company. Nothing speaks louder than $$$. Cisco can put out ads on TV how much they support human rights, they can sponsor human rights campagns for the PR and so on but as long as the Chinese give the $$$ it will also sponsor censorship. It is an entity that exists for the sole purpose to make money. Therefore the best way to control it is to stop investing in it and thus reduce its potential of making money.

    I often see people in US, the most capitalistic country in the world (this might start a flame war but I'll say it anyway, that is how I see it), who believe that somehow all these companies have morals and are actually trying to change the world for the better even if it means taking a loss. They view companies as they would like to view individuals: honest, charitable, friendly and in general, very nice. Companies will go to great lengths to project that image onto the public. But the reality is that their only goal is to make money. If something doesn't make money - it is not worth doing, it has nothing to do with morals or principles. Even Cisco's self-imposed resolution to not cooperate with oppresive governments is there to keep people like you happy and investing in them, if they can also get away with cooperating with China and make money off of that, they'll do that too.

    Sometimes the goverment or the people (through legislature) step in and put "the smack down". Have you noticed how Phillip Morris started airing all these "smoking is bad for you" ads - it is not because they are nice and want to help and educate, they are just "making the public aware" as to avoid paying another settlement, they know that those who are addicted and smoke will not look at the ad and say, "oh crap, so this is actually bad for me! I better quit right now!".

  20. Is anything more important than money? by reporter · · Score: 3, Interesting
    such a resolution would impede the company's ability to do business in the single fastest growing tech market in the world.

    Yet, are there things that are more important than money?

    Fortunately, many of my peers in the United States of America feel that some things are more important than money. Consider the case of Stanford University. It is probably the most commercial of the elite universities and has strong ties to industry. Yet, Stanford University recently divested its investments in Chinese companies like PetroChina, which is commited to indifference to the Sudanese victims of human-rights abuses.

    What surprises me about the lead article in this discussion is that Boston Common Asset Management, which (to my knowledge) is not an official advocate of socially responsible investing, has done such a clearly socially responsible act. Does anyone know of any funds managed by Boston Common Asset Management? I want to invest a significant amount of my 401K monies into those funds.

    Like Stanford's Board of Trustees, I too am committed to the cause of human rights. I invest exclusively in socially responsible mutual funds.

    By the way, there is a significant and measurable difference between Western society and non-Western society. In the West, you will often see incidents of this kind, where shareholders actually demand that companies support human rights. Cisco will change. Reebok has already changed and is now an official supporter of Amnesty International. Can anyone find examples of such shareholder activism in, say, the Chinese province of Taiwan?

    1. Re:Is anything more important than money? by stinkykitten · · Score: 0

      Yet, are there things that are more important than money?

      You are right but you forget one thing. If it's not illegal or against the companies rules or ability to actually do the work, then the company would be breaking the law if it turned down the contract with China.

      As has been stated many times before, a standard incorporated company has one goal above all else, make money for the shareholders. This is not just greed, this is the law. The executives of a company can have their asses handed to them if they pass up any viable money making oppertunity.

      We may not like what Cisco and other companies are doing but until we change the laws that govern how companies are run Cisco has no choice but to assist China in its ultimate goal of subjugation and repression.

    2. Re:Is anything more important than money? by AndroidCat · · Score: 1

      Yet, are there things that are more important than money?

      Not if they're obeying the First Law of Elronics: "MakeMoMoney!"
      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    3. Re:Is anything more important than money? by mikeswi · · Score: 1

      I have about $~1,000 in cash sitting in a scottrade account that's not tied up in stocks currently. If Cisco fails to push this off the agenda, I might buy a few hundred shares and give my proxy to someone voting for the Human Rights policy.

    4. Re:Is anything more important than money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You're mistaken on this point. Corporate directors are required to make decisions that best serve the interests of their shareholders. This is known as the shareholder primacy norm. There's a world of difference between serving the best interests of shareholders and making money at all costs.

      If a majority of the shareholders express concerns over the possibility of aiding China with human rights violations then the directors of the company would not face any legal trouble if they turned down a contract with China over such concerns.

  21. Knee-jerk by MuNansen · · Score: 0

    Of course anyone hears the word "censorship" in America they immediately knee-jerk into holier-than-thou mode. In America, yes, censorship is a huge problem. Does that mean it's bad everywhere?

    Here's a clear question to ask yourself: Is it possible for a situation to exist where an amount of censorship by the government is "okay"?

    If there is one, it'd be China. Unfortunately, not everyone has 4 years free to study the country like I did, so most will simply judge from afar.

  22. Who's in charge? by Dice+Fivefold · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If not even the shareholders gets a vote in how the corporations is run. What is running them?

    1. Re:Who's in charge? by WebHostingGuy · · Score: 1

      Management. In the corporate world where billions of shares are floated the person owning 100, 1,000 or even 100,000 shares is just a very small fractional owner.

      --
      Quality Hosting e3 Servers
    2. Re:Who's in charge? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Employees run the corporations. Shareholders merely elect the Board who appoints the officers who manage the way the corporation is run.

  23. Boston Common Asset Management by kpainter · · Score: 0

    = Greenpeace with money

  24. Respect for national sovereignty? by vga_init · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The Chinese are their own country. It's their prerogative to make their own rules and manage their own country, and I oppose self-righteous attempts of foreign capitalist entities of exerting control through economis.

    Cencorship constitutes a gray area in politics. Can you prove to me that their censorship violates human rights? If it's gone too far, can you show me how far is too far and prove to me that the lives of the people are worse because of this? I don't want theories or political arguments--I want data. We have cencorship in the United States, you know, but you don't see Cisco turning on our government, do you?

    1. Re:Respect for national sovereignty? by tkrotchko · · Score: 1

      You're missing the point.

      Cisco, as a company, has the right to refuse to sell their equipment or sell their expertise to China.

      Or do you feel they must sell their equipment to whoever has the cash? If I own a significant chunk of Cisco (lets be silly and say I own 50.1%), I certainly can call up the CEO and say "Don't sell equipment to China; I'm troubled by their human rights policy". That's okay. Its legitimate. You may not agree with it, and the other 49.9% might disagree with it. But its my company and it works the way I want it to.

      Why is that wrong?

      --
      You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
    2. Re:Respect for national sovereignty? by shawb · · Score: 1

      Yes, the Chinese are free to run their own country. Just as shareholders should be free to tell the company they own what to do. And that corporation should feel free to not do businuess with China if the shareholders don't want it to.

      --
      I'll never make that mistake again, reading the experts' opinions. - Feynman
    3. Re:Respect for national sovereignty? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're so right! I mean, the next thing you know we'll be invading a sovereign country, deposing an existing government and pushing our style of democracy on them whether they're ready or not!

      Oh, wait...

    4. Re:Respect for national sovereignty? by divide+overflow · · Score: 1

      > Can you prove to me that their censorship violates human rights?

      Damn, if I hadn't posted this reply I could have modded you into oblivion! :)

    5. Re:Respect for national sovereignty? by jcr · · Score: 1

      The Chinese are their own country. It's their prerogative to make their own rules and manage their own country,

      Indeed it is, and once the Red Dynasty falls, they'll be able to do that.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    6. Re:Respect for national sovereignty? by Kompressor · · Score: 1
      True, to a point. However remote, it is possible that Cisco could be caught under the anti-boycott law.

      The anti-boycot law was enacted to prevent companies from refusing to trade with Israeli government or citizens based on religious or political reasons. I am not framiliar with the specifics of it, but I don't doubt that a good lawyer could twist it to apply to Cisco refusing to deal with the Chinese government for what ammounts to reasons of their nationality.

      Personally I support shareholders taking action like this, I'm just playing devil's advocate to keep the ideas flowing.

      --
      kmem russian roulette: Aquillar> dd if=/dev/urandom of=/dev/kmem bs=1 count=1 seek=$RANDOM
    7. Re:Respect for national sovereignty? by killjoe · · Score: 1

      Iraq was their own country too, look how far that got them.

      Co county is their own country unless they can repel an invasion by the US. It's as simple as that. I will grant you that in this case even if china is unable to repel an invasion they can make it hurt really bad so that allows them some degree of freedom to do whatever they want.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    8. Re:Respect for national sovereignty? by krunk4ever · · Score: 1

      when you censor out any pages with words like freedom and liberty, you know you've got a problem. unless you don't think freedom and liberty are part of human rights...

  25. Well then... by MerlynDavis · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I object to Cisco Routers being used to route packets that contain child porn, racism, and jingoism... Perhaps Cisco should install software on all their routers so that Cisco engineers can examine every packet that they route and determine if it's for a moral purpose.... This would be like buying half-dozen shares in the Remington corporation and demand they stop selling guns to people who kill things with them... Cisco's business is firewalls and such...they have no control over what the purchasers of their equipment do with them...and if Cisco cuts off direct ties to China, then any one of their hundreds of resellers will sell the product to the Chinese.

    --
    -merlyn
    1. Re:Well then... by smeenz · · Score: 1

      As well as the Evil bit in the TCP header (for viruses etc), perhaps we could introduce a morality value as well, so that only highly moral traffic, for example, could enter or leave my site.

    2. Re:Well then... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps Cisco should install software on all their routers so that Cisco engineers can examine every packet that they route and determine if it's for a moral purpose....

      This is a meaningless straw man. Your example is extreme and clearly unworkable. A company choosing its business partners and clients according to a code of conduct is not extreme and perfectly doable.

      if Cisco cuts off direct ties to China, then any one of their hundreds of resellers will sell the product to the Chinese.

      Ah yes: "If I'm not evil, someone else will be, so that relieves me of all responsibility for moral action."

      Not a very compelling argument.

  26. Corporate responsibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Corporations need to focus on profits.

    If you don't like their behavior:

    1. sell your shares and don't buy any more
    2. do not buy their products
    3. let others know why you don't like them

    The above three are not time-consuming at all. If you want to be an activist, consider tackling an issue that impacts the greatest number of people in your country.

    For example, if you are an American, then consider becoming an activist regarding campaign finance reform and reducing conflicts of interest in government.

    Same can be said for media. If you think a particular cable news network is unreasonably biased and distorting facts, then:

    1. make a list of products advertised during the particular broadcast

    2. stop buying those products and write a letter to the vendor letting them know why you will not buy anymore while they advertise there

    3. publish your list so that others on the internet that share your views can do the same

    The few contribute more to getting a politician elected than the majority of Americans, so politicians generally do things to help those that put them in office. Since most of us spend more on movies than helping get honest people elected, we're getting what we deserve.

    Whether you are Democrat or Republican or other, please consider taking 10 minutes each day to make a difference. Vote with your wallet by boycotting products advertised to support trash-journalism or companies that contribute far too much money to politicians.

  27. Remember IBM and the Nazis? by Chordonblue · · Score: 1

    Whose responsibility was it to insure that IBM's equipment wasn't used for nefarious purposes by Hitler's regime? Who was there to tell IBM that their equipment might be used to sort people like worthless cargo at concentration camps?

    I would argue that it was EVERYONE'S responsibility - although no one seemed to think about it at that time. This time there is a clear indication what China is up to and that this equipment is clearly being used in a manner inconsistent with our values.

    --
    "...Well, there's egg and bacon; egg sausage and bacon; egg and spam; egg bacon and spam; egg bacon sausage and spam..."
    1. Re:Remember IBM and the Nazis? by superpulpsicle · · Score: 1

      The IBM Nazis were using systems way ahead of time. People didn't understand punchcard systems till 10+ years later. And getting mad at IBM equipment is like getting mad at a MP40. It's just a utility/tool that anyone else can use.

    2. Re:Remember IBM and the Nazis? by cherberos · · Score: 1

      If I recall correctly, Germany was way ahead of the US in this field.
      In every other field, actually. The first years of the war the US were dependant on the UK maintain the lines.
      Not that that has helped Germany. The US had to much flesh to throw in the battle. And luckely for us, that is!

      It was after the war, that the US 'recruited' all the Nazi scientists (after erasing any misfitting history...).
      This, it seems to me, is also why current innovation in the US is grindint to a halt.
      The US was always depended on the import of knowledge and intelligence, but now president Bush has shut off that source.

      --
      So "used" cases that used "unused" could break, though older compilers in essence used "unused" to mean both "used" and
  28. Socially Responsiblie Investing by Misch · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's called "Socially Responsible Investing". One of the interesting things I learned at the Great Hudson River Revival is that there are many different mutual funds out there that invest in socially and environmentally responsible companies.

    And yes, some of these funds do "beat the street" when it comes to performance. It may take a little work, but you might be able to convince your employer to make it possible for you to put pre-tax money into these funds. (For a 401(k) for example)

    Google search: SRI investing

    --

    --You will rephrase your request for me to go to hell. Goto statements are not acceptable programming constructs
    1. Re:Socially Responsiblie Investing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      google 'SRI Investing'... doesn't that last 'i' make 'investing' redundant?

    2. Re:Socially Responsiblie Investing by ndogg · · Score: 1

      Not in a link to Google. For all Google knows, you could mean Space Research Institute.

      --
      // file: mice.h
      #include "frickin_lasers.h"
  29. Nothing to do with soverignty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The shareholders of a company have a right, as a group, to decide how the company is run. If the shareholders believe that helping China censor websites is against their wishes, then that is their perogative. The shareholders are not asking Cisco to send a warship to nuke Bejing, now are they?

  30. hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    While I have little or no love for Cisco (they're pretty much the Microsoft of the networking hardware world), I'm not sure how it can be "their fault" particularly if China buys the same Cisco kit the rest of us do and uses the same old standard features that Westerners routinely use for corporate firewalls etc, only to build their giant firewall.

    What's Cisco supposed to do? Just blanket not sell to China Inc. (china essentially operates like a large corporation) just in case their kit is used for Evil(tm)? Many western corporations are as powerful as nations and quite Evil(tm) too - for consistency, shouldn't Cisco therefore also be compelled not to sell network hardware to Shell Oil or Halliburton, say?

    1. Re:hmmm by kcbrown · · Score: 1
      What's Cisco supposed to do? Just blanket not sell to China Inc. (china essentially operates like a large corporation) just in case their kit is used for Evil(tm)?

      What do you mean "just in case"? We're talking about a situation where Cisco knows their kit will be used for Evil(tm). And you're saying they should turn a blind eye to that as long as it's profitable?

      So, I take it, that means that you believe that U.S. weapons manufacturers should sell weapons, including nuclear weapons, to terrorists? After all, why should the weapons manufacturers care who they're selling to as long as they can make a tidy profit off the deal, right?

      And if the above bothers you, try substituting "China" for "terrorists" in the above. It's all the same, really.

      If you disagree with the the scenario I described, then tell me how is it meaningfully different from the Cisco situation?

      --
      Use 'slashdot stuff' in the subject line in any email you send me if you want to get past the spam filter.
  31. Other Human Rights abusers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To be fair, we'll have to include Texas.

  32. Is this but an advert for business doing business? by threaded · · Score: 2, Informative

    From http://www.bostoncommonasset.com/ Boston Common Asset Management is a full-service, employee-owned social investment firm dedicated to the pursuit of financial return and social change.
    i.e. they are in the business of asking companies like Cisco stuff like this. It is there unique selling point, it is how they make money.

  33. Ewww by ZorbaTHut · · Score: 1

    You got Cisco on my human rights!

    --
    Breaking Into the Industry - A development log about starting a game studio.
  34. Only China? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pot, kettle, black.

    How about putting some pressure on them for threatening to ruin the lives of people in "the free world", over [i]bugs[/i] they have created before trying to push a company into dictating policies (no matter how wrong we might feel they are) of the worlds largest nation?

  35. Paging Mr. Sociopath... by Generalisimo+Zang · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So, since Human Rights have nothing to do with profit, as you say, then you'd have no problem with investing in a company that (for the sake of argument) used stolen human organs and blood drained from kidnapped orphans to make a profit?

    That'd be ok, wouldn't it? Because, as you said, your investments to make profit should be somehow seperated from your feelings on human rights?

    Ok, so how about we cut to the chase, then? How about I offer you $1,000,000 tax-free (pure PROIFIT!!!) for your wife and daughters, so they can be used in a fatal and painful medical experiment?

    That should be cool with you, shouldn't it, since you are a guy who likes to seperate his financial considerations from his morality?

    They have a word for people who place profitabiliy and money above concerns of human rights and basic morality.

    We call those people sociopaths.

    1. Re:Paging Mr. Sociopath... by Seumas · · Score: 1

      Hi. Meet reality.

      It's the business of business to make profit. If you want to save the world, join a non-profit and put your money and energy behind a cause. It's the job of a CEO to make money in any legal way he can. Period. While it'd be nice for them not to exploit workers and political situations in China (or in America for that matter), it's not his obligation to do it.

      Shareholders trying to force the company they own stock in to be socially concious is like a police officer being concerned with observing rights under the Bill of Rights. It would be wonderful, but that isn't his job, either.

      How about the Shareholders of American companies maybe take just as much involvement in things when employees of said owned companies are screwing employees out of their pensions or laying them off by the thousands to ship their jobs over to China or somewhere else and THEN suddenly become concerned about THEIR situation after the jobs have been sent there?

      And, most of all, who the hell are we to be concerned about Chinese censorship and such when we can't even avoid it in our own country?!

      These are all seriously misplaced priorities - and the priorities aren't really even the responsibility of the shareholders in the first place. This is the problem with hippyies growing up and trying to start investing.

    2. Re:Paging Mr. Sociopath... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am intrigued by your companies business plan. Could you send me a prospectus? I am very interested in making a large investment if the returns are as good as you say.

    3. Re:Paging Mr. Sociopath... by gilroy · · Score: 1
      Blockquoth the poster:

      Shareholders trying to force the company they own stock in to be socially concious is like a police officer being concerned with observing rights under the Bill of Rights. It would be wonderful, but that isn't his job, either.

      Um, it actually is the job of a police officer to be concerned with observing rights under the Bill of Rights. Ever hear of the Fourth Amendment? The Fifth? The Sixth? Ever hear of Miranda? of Epstein?

      It is the settled and considered opinion of the American judiciary that law enforcement must be cognizant and respectful of the rights of the accused. Whole cases can be thrown out when they're not. What's more, the majority of law enforcement agencies in America recognize this as part of their duties, too, and not just to secure a good conviction rate. They understand that, by having the populace see them as allies and not thugs, they can do a better job.

      So your analogy actually argues for the shareholder activists.
    4. Re:Paging Mr. Sociopath... by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      Shareholders trying to force the company they own stock in to be socially concious is like a police officer being concerned with observing rights under the Bill of Rights. It would be wonderful, but that isn't his job, either.

      You are wrong Mr. Moneybags(Ms Moneypenny?)! I think that you would find that observing rights under the Bill of Rights is very much part of his job which entails upholding the law, including those laws which are actually part of the Supreme Law of the Land, you know, the Constitution? Why do I feel you're not serious? That has to be one of the wierdest analogies I have seen in a long time.

      --
      What?
    5. Re:Paging Mr. Sociopath... by kcbrown · · Score: 1
      It's the business of business to make profit. If you want to save the world, join a non-profit and put your money and energy behind a cause. It's the job of a CEO to make money in any legal way he can. Period.

      Really? Says who? You?

      And that includes taking steps to change what is legal and what isn't, right? So you believe that it's the job of a CEO to do whatever it takes to make slavery legal, since that would clearly make it easier for him to make money, right?

      No way. The business of business is to do whatever its owners and the society it exists in want it to do. Making money at the expense of the well-being of others may be your priority (and that of those who currently run so many corporations today), but no sane society would tolerate that behavior, much less condone it.

      If the shareholders aren't the ones who the corporation should answer to, then who should it answer to? You can't simultaneously claim (a) that the corporation should maximize profit at the expense of everything else because of its responsibility to its shareholders and (b) that it doesn't have any responsibility to the same shareholders when they demand ethical behavior from it.

      To attempt to make those claims simultaneously is to reveal your true beliefs on the matter: that corporations should be evil (for what is evil if not intentionally harming others for your own gain?). Since corporations are treated by the legal system as individuals (something that I'm sure you agree with), it obviously follows that you believe that individuals, too, should act the same way. In short, you appear to condone evil in general.

      Sorry, but I don't. And neither do most people that I know.

      Now, of course, you probably don't actually condone evil. But it's what logically follows from your apparent beliefs about corporations. In short, you appear to have an internal inconsistency in your belief system that you need to resolve.

      --
      Use 'slashdot stuff' in the subject line in any email you send me if you want to get past the spam filter.
    6. Re:Paging Mr. Sociopath... by BackInIraq · · Score: 1

      It's the business of business to make profit. If you want to save the world, join a non-profit and put your money and energy behind a cause. It's the job of a CEO to make money in any legal way he can. Period. While it'd be nice for them not to exploit workers and political situations in China (or in America for that matter), it's not his obligation to do it.

      To an extent, you are right. I don't LIKE this philosophy, but it is very true. Which is why I bolded the word "legal" up there. You want the situation in China to change? Rather than expect every company in America (and elsewhere) to stop doing business with them on their own, which is highly unlikely, perhaps we should apply a bit more pressure on our government to do so. I think an absolute embargo on any goods produced in China would hit them where it hurts.

      Would this hurt the Chinese people as well? Of course. But maybe, just maybe, the poverty and starvation that ensued would be the catalyst required to spark some change over there. Then again, it hasn't worked for Cuba yet.

      All it would take it making our business relationship with China a "real" election issue. As it stands, Americans are much more worried about securing tax cuts for themselves and keeping homosexuals from getting married.

  36. Reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The reality is that, if companies had their way, no one would be paid (other than execs) and there would be no free speech. This is why there is an eternal struggle between the classes....

    Hmmm, this sounds familiar.

  37. thought is good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Companies are out to make a profit not a political statement.

    "Companies" are groups of people working in concert, and as such are concerned with all the things those people care about -- both making money, as well as political issues such as basic human rights.

    Investors, i.e., the shareholders, want a monetary return, not a political return on their investment.

    Repeating falsehoods does not make them true, regardless of how much our current administration has popularized this approach. The fact that a sizable number of Cisco's shareholders have brought up the proposed resolution, directly contradicts this idiotic statement of yours.

    1. Re:thought is good by WebHostingGuy · · Score: 1

      And saying the statement is a falsehood does not make it so. If the shareholders really cared about the resolution why did they make it non-binding?

      The reason? Something else mattered more: the projected revenue from dealing with China.

      What's worse? Someone who says I want the company to make money? Or someone who says the company must be politically minded but in secret hope they really don't do that and actually make money?

      --
      Quality Hosting e3 Servers
  38. OK, suppose it is voted on... by mpaque · · Score: 2, Insightful

    An entry goes in the annual report supplement for proxy votes. The 62.27% of shares held by institutions and insiders goes along with the board to vote against it. Most of the folks getting the proxy statement don't bother to register a vote.

    If as many as half register a proxy vote, and all of them vote in favor, that's a whopping 18.87% of shares in favor. Proposal fails...

  39. as someone that actually lived in china... by jjn1056 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    for 18 months I can tell you the great firewall is a serious problem. Not only does it block news and political sites (as well as tons of other stuff that can only makes you say huh?) but the increased latency makes VoIP and IM quite spotty.

    It slows down the entire internet outside of china, even if the website is not being blocked.

    Even if you pay for a proxy server outside of China, this is a serious pain that impairs any Internet related business.

    I will never buy Cisco products, or any other company that is involved in it.

    Perhaps it would be better to boycott companies that are big buyers of Cisco products? This worked pretty well in Forcing the South African Aparteid Goverment to change.

    Anyway, after living in China I am not convinced they are on their way to a huge bubble and collapse. Sure, I see tons of new buildings and businesses, but there are also tons of scams and empty buildings. I wonder if they will not soon overdevelop beyong their capacity to use? Well, I guess we will just see.

    --
    Peace, or Not?
    1. Re:as someone that actually lived in china... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its wonderful for someone to have a moral conscious such as yours (I am not being sarcastic), but you really do not have the power to "boycott" bad businesses. There are very few major corporations not guilty of something that you would disagree with. Everything from employing sweatshop labor, indirectly assisting human trafficing, helping an oppressive regieme, or anything of the like.

      We just have to understand that people are greedy and money is a very enticing object for greedy people. Big companies will easily look past trampling on human rights, destroying society, and corrupting culture becuase money is money.

  40. So now it is US companies also? by cdrguru · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You folks complain about the US government sticking its nose into the business of other countries. Now you want US corporations to try to dictate internal policy to other countries as well? Why? Who made Cisco into World Policemen, Jr.?

    1. Re:So now it is US companies also? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody. This is a group of shareholders who wish to tell Cisco how to conduct their business, not China.

      If the shareholders don't want Cisco to do business with China, they are well within their rights to use their freedom of choice in the marketplace.

    2. Re:So now it is US companies also? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You just don't understand, man. It's like... these corporations... they're all... corporation-y! They must be stopped! I'm gonna go protest once I finish this joint.

    3. Re:So now it is US companies also? by evilviper · · Score: 1
      Now you want US corporations to try to dictate internal policy to other countries as well? Why? Who made Cisco into World Policemen, Jr.?

      This is NOTHING about Policing other countries. This is pure capitalism.

      If you don't like the products a company produces, or their labor record, or their history of pollution, you buy your products from somewhere else.

      The same goes for corporations. If their shareholders don't like the practices of China, they go somewhere else. China isn't getting forced to do anything, just as companies aren't forced to do anything when you decide not to buy from them anymore. They just lose X ammounts of income if they do nothing.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  41. Actual Result of Shareholder Resolution Passing by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 1

    Ooh, maybe now with this shareholder resolution, not only will the Chinese be censored by their government, they won't have jobs either! Of course, those Cisco employees working with China won't have jobs either, I guess. Great work, guys! Let's kill more jobs and pretend that makes people more free!

    --
    Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
  42. When will China get their human right issues by blcss · · Score: 1

    resolved? It seems the only time they even make token gestures toward human rights in when we lean on them.

    --
    We don't need yet another new programming language. Let's just pick an existing language and fix its flaws.
  43. mod parent UP, to about a zillion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SOMEBODY needs to get in front of Cisco and take it to task for the abuses of law and good sense it makes and has made. From anti-trust, to cover-ups, to payola schemes, blackmail, running roughshod over industry standards groups, to aiding and abetting corrupt foreign governments ... I can document and provie it ALL (and you can, too) Cisco is simply overdue for a MAJOR smackdown.

    I have done all I can. I have run a Cisco-Free Network for over a decade, with nary a problem and THOUSANDS of dollars of savings. Not to mention a far better level of security.

    Now, it's up to others to stand up to this virtual monopoly, which is dozens of times worse than M$.

    And, don't forget: Linksys is Cisco. Use Netgear or D-Link for home networks. Buy Nortel for business-class LAN switches, and of course, Debian makes a great kernel for 99% of any router you'll ever need!

  44. Re:Et tu, Google by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You probably won't hear it on Slashdot, but Google's Censorship in China Worked, Wins Favor

  45. You still don't get it... by Generalisimo+Zang · · Score: 1

    We no longer have slavery (officially) in the United States.... even though slavery was highly profitable.

    We also no longer allow 10-year-olds to be worked 12 hours a day in the textile mills.... even though that was also highly profitable.

    We also have made it illegal (technically) for large corporations to dump high concentrations of known carcinogens into our rivers and streams... even though these regulations cut into profits.

    When your quest for profits starts to infringe on the basic human rights of those around you, then something has gotta give way.

    Either you're gonna make less profits, or people are goping to have to give up their human rights so you can go out and buy a second yacht.

    Guess which kind of world most people would rather live in?

    1. Re:You still don't get it... by jcr · · Score: 1

      We no longer have slavery (officially) in the United States.... even though slavery was highly profitable.

      Actually, it wasn't all that profitable. The reason why the yankee factory owners preferred immigrant labor to slaves, was that slaves were much more expensive. If an Irishman died in your mill, you weren't out a couple of hundred dollars for a replacement.

      Transporting slaves was quite lucrative, but slavery as a labor source was already on its way out by the 1860's

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    2. Re:You still don't get it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Legal" does not mean there are not hidden costs. I think where people often get confused is with very basic economic concepts. Take for example Bastiat's parable of the broken window. It goes something like this.

      1. someone vandalizes my window.
      2. I pay a handyman to fix it.
      3. The handyman buys a window from another company.
      4. The other company buys materials from another company.
      5. etc...

      Woo hoo! Looky at all the jobs and profits I created. Therefore any profit is "good"... including destructive profit.

      What is not acknowledged or clearly understood (by I think the vast majority of people) is that there is a hidden cost. Although breaking the window may (or may not) stimulate economic activity had I not needed to fix the destroyed window I would have spent my money in another way. Perhaps getting the handyman to install a second window. Now he needs to buy another window... from a company... that needs materials. The same situation but in the second case we now have twice the goods. Therefore one can conclude all forms of profit are not equally efficient at producing goods or else the handyman (or his competitors) would go around breaking windows and argue it is "good for business" (which we consider unethical)

      Game theory also touches on the concept of selfishnees and economics from a very different perspective (in the classic prisoner's dilemma). Basically if each prisoner is selfish and rats out his accomplish he eventually ends up in a worse situation than if he took the high road.

      This is where government and laws come in. It (theoretically) acts as a stabilizer by forbidding the handyman from making profit from breaking windows, and guiding the prisoners to a better mutual good that alone they could not achieve. The left needs to understand that businessmen will always (like everyone else) seek what's best for their version of the world. However here is the philosophical black hole where I think equations start breaking down. If the handyman makes enough money to change the laws (by paying squadrons of lawyers and subsidizing lawmakers) to make it legal to break windows... then all bets are off. This sort of fixing-the-game is how we end up occasionally with Kings and Emperors and is horrifically inefficient use of resources and human life. The law and police at this point no longer serves the public only--they revert to being enforcers for the interests of elite.

      Personally I think allowing an individual or company the ability to break windows is foolish. However this must also be measured against personal freedom. I suppose the point is moot on a practical level though since the lawmakers will decide that too. I guess the current shenanigans will continue for as long as the public is too distracted by terrorism and "Jar Jar" to mount an effective legal offensive. The backlash will most certainly be nasty when it eventually comes (hopefully we don't end up with communism again). I'm sure a backlash is coming (albeit may take decades) since social instability caused by these economic inefficiencies and inequities will eventually arise again. In the bell curse of life not everyone can be an Napolean or Newton. In the meantime the extreme right is busy fortifying with various security measures because on some level I think they know there will be a reckoning. After all there never is a need for security around people you treat well and are happy..

      America is a republic based on democratic principles. If the government continues to move away from democracy in favor of corporation driven republicanism it defacto is removing the voices of it's own citizens from decisions. In my opinion while this may appear to have short term benefits it effectively is creating a new version of feudalism. Although life will go on--- much l

    3. Re:You still don't get it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Transporting slaves was quite lucrative, but slavery as a labor source was already on its way out by the 1860's"

            Surely that's why the south was full of slaves. Southern "owners" weren't actually trying to profit-they were in fact just trying to give "niggers" jobs out of the goodness of their heart.

            ~ unbelievably stupid comment

  46. homophobes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So bend over and hand the Chinese that bottle of vaseline.

    Some variation on this puerile non-joke appears in practically every Slashdot thread. Why is this community apparently so thoroughly and repellently homophobic? Your constant whining about various kinds of "freedom" rings pretty hollow in the face of this casual bigotry.

  47. /. SQUEEZES RIGHTS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  48. if the shareholders really cared... by KillShill · · Score: 1

    they wouldn't let cisco do business with a lot of other governments either.

    it's just too selective to be taken seriously.

    --
    Science : Proprietary , Knowledge : Open Source
  49. This is why... by jav1231 · · Score: 1

    This is why we shouldn't do ANY business there. Free-thinking countries opened the door to this long ago. Now the market is too big to ignore. We've legitimized China on the world stage and have little choice but to do business with them. The question is, what are we going to do with the big snake we've raised from a tiny baby now that it's outgrown the small bits we'd been feeding it? We've been doing so much business with this machine that it's now huge. The same goes for Vietnam, though we can nip that in the bud at this point (and I'd interject it's a slap in the face to our Veterans that we'd do ANY business with them). The idea that if we do business with communist nations we can "turn them on" to capitalism and eventually democracy is a risky game. I know it's working to some extent in China but it's not at the point it can't go south. If the free countries of the world would have taken a stand against these nations to start with, they'd perhaps rethink their positions. We had the chance when the Soviet Union fell.

  50. What about the log in your own eye? by zakkie · · Score: 4, Insightful

    US shareholders would do best to get their own government's act cleaned up before getting all uppity over China...

    1. Re:What about the log in your own eye? by superyanthrax · · Score: 1

      Agreed. One of the strongest anti-American arguments internationally right now when it comes to human rights is that given the American abuses in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Camp X-Ray, they have no right to criticize others over human rights. The American position on human rights has seriously deteriorated over the last 5 years.

  51. Wait wait wait, back up... by DreamCoder · · Score: 1
    I think alot of the posts on this article are suffering from a Serious Contradiction of Principles. On the one hand is human rights, we all think everyone should be free and clearly the Chineese government is not with the program. But, on the other hand, we hate it when big companies start telling customers what they can and can't do with technology. Software and technology should also be free, right?

    Suppose it wasn't Cisco, suppose the Chineese government was using Linux to build their Great Firewall. Would you then be then advocating that we prevent them from using it (as if you could)? No, more likely we'd all be hailing them as geniuses for recognizing the fabulousness of Open Source.

    Seriously folks, do you really think the answer here is for tech companies to become even more controlling of technology?

  52. Prefer private firms by abulafia · · Score: 4, Insightful
    This is one of the reasons I prefer privately held firms, in both my personal and professional life. You simply get better service. If I go to an owner with a problem (be it that the product/service sucks, or that you don't like that they're dumping oil down the sewer (true story)), they actually listen to you. As an owner of a private company, I know I do - that's my dinner you're threatening when you bitch to me about something you didn't like, so I'm going to do anything reasonable (and some things that aren't) to make you happy.

    Add public trading to the mix, and the importance of customer service is diluted. Short term value extraction becomes the most important thing, and goals of course shift, as you note.

    Of course, some functions need the capital that (almost always) only an IPO can provide, and many industries are the sorts in which a failure to IPO means you're doomed. Cisco is certainly in this category. But when buying Cisco (or Walmart), one should remember that you're implicitly funding their behaviour. What that means to you? I dunno. For me, I don't shop with either of them. Does this mean I pay more for soap? Probably. It also led to me learning how to make soap. I don't do it any more, but it was neat to learn. I also build network hardware for clients most of the time - they don't need Cisco gear, and I'm good enough at it now that it actually works out cheaper to use OpenBSD on decent hardware. For places where redundancy and optimization is important, we bid it out for the client (Cisco included), and Cisco almost never wins on cost benefit.

    Lesson? Small, hungry companies provide better service and product, and the attitude of dealing with the devil you know just means you don't learn anything new. Oh, and that economics dictates everything, but that doesn't invalidate rational exploration of alternatives - heck, some people even call that 'innovation'.

    --
    I forget what 8 was for.
    1. Re:Prefer private firms by Widowwolf · · Score: 1

      OK i kow this is opttopic but please help. The lien in your sig comes froma asong..what is the name of that damn song..i have been looking for it for months!. thanks~

      --
      ~~"Of course, that's just my opinion. I could be wrong." ~~Dennis Miller
    2. Re:Prefer private firms by abulafia · · Score: 1

      "Kiss off", by the Violent Femmes.

      --
      I forget what 8 was for.
  53. Vendor Independent Stuff by putko · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You can run a LAN/WAN without using proprietary software (which is what Cisco provides -- as integrated HW/SW systems).

    The Chinese already make all the hardware they need -- they could build their own damn firewall with a bunch of MIPS/x86/ARM -- whatever -- and the various modems (fiber/ATM/DSL/wireless). Cisco could go "poof" tomorrow, and the Chinese would build their own repressive firewall out of "stock" components.

    There are probable a variety of companies (e.g. Google or Yahoo! or IBM) that build their own networks -- because they can, know better, or just don't want Cisco around. Or universities that are too broke (and too savvy) to buy Cisco crap. I don't think Berkeley bought Cisco for a long time (they probably could not afford it).

    When I consider this, it makes me think the Chinese really are to blame.

    --
    http://www.thebricktestament.com/the_law/when_to_s tone_your_children/dt21_18a.html
  54. And while we're at it... by DreamCoder · · Score: 1

    Yeah, tech companies really need to get more involved with enforcing moral and ethical behavior. Hey, maybe we could get Dell to stop selling PC's to all those theiving college students that will only use them to download music w/o paying for it. Oh, wait...

  55. Um, a little late? by Duncan3 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Doesn't China already have a home grown router based on stolen Cisco tech that's just as good? (for those out of the loop, yes)

    So why in the world are they even talking to Cisco, which makes something at 10x the cost, except to trick them into adding features they will never buy anyway.

    Come on Cisco, get your head our of your ass and wake up!

    --
    - Adam L. Beberg - The Cosm Project - http://www.mithral.com/
    1. Re:Um, a little late? by evilviper · · Score: 1
      Doesn't China already have a home grown router based on stolen Cisco tech that's just as good?

      The way to combat copyright infringement isn't to stop selling your legitimate product, and forcing people to use the illegal one, rather than nothing at all...

      Come on Cisco, get your head our of your ass and wake up!

      You could say that about every company drooling over the low cost of manufacturing in China. It's already very well established that, as soon as the Chinese factories know how to make your products, they will make massive numbers of illegal rip-offs, and the government is fully supporting this process.

      All the companies manufacturing in China are essentially out-sourcing almost their entire company to their biggest competitor, and they can't do it fast enough, because it's cheaper, and they'll make more money off of it in the short-term.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  56. Nope by melted · · Score: 1

    The primary purpose of Cisco routers is routing network packets and providing network security. The meaning of "network security" is up to the customer purchasing the equipment.

    You could say that the primary purpose of matches is burning stuff, and you'd be right. It all just depends on the kind of stuff you burn with them.

  57. Pray to St. Pancake! (Patron Saints of moonbats) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  58. MOD PARENT UP! by mikefe · · Score: 1

    n/t

    --
    There: Something at a specific location.
    Their: Owned by someone.
    Please make sure your english compiles.
  59. Obligation to the shareholders... by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    They have an obligation to the shareholders to do whatever the shareholders want and that goes beyond just making money.

  60. Freedom of expression by Decessus · · Score: 1

    I know that one of the basic principles that this country is founded on is the freedom of expression. In an attempt to better inform myself about China and it's policies, I've started to ask questions to myself that I can't really seem to answer to my own satisfaction. I'm curious as to why freedom of expression, and freedom of speech are so important. Links to papers, websites, or your own personal views would be much appreciated.

  61. Why? by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    When possessing the stock means the ability to tell them to stop?

  62. The U.S. should stop arming all nations by michaelmalak · · Score: 1

    Israel's enemies are armed thanks to the U.S. The "military industrial complex" (that Eisenhower warned about) is reaping profits by pitting one nation against another and selling arms to them all. And then there's the blowback -- both Saddam and Osama were products of the U.S.

  63. Translation by Maxwell'sSilverLART · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "According to this article at Wired, Boston Common Asset Management, has filed a shareholders resolution asking Cisco to 'adopt a comprehensive human rights policy for its dealings with the Chinese government, and with other states practicing political censorship of the internet.'"

    Translation:
    Free market demands company consider human rights; does so without interference or prodding from government.

    Told you it could work.

    --
    Moderate drunk! It's more fun that way!
  64. Wake Up by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    I find it interesting that your libertarian capitalist argument doesn't recognize that this story is about Cisco shareholders demanding a policy from Cisco. Or that the poster to whom you replied is a Cisco shareholder. They own the company. Yet Cisco is not only ignoring their request, which relates to Cisco's major business operations, but asking the SEC to make ignoring their shareholders official.

    It's really not your place to question the priorities of Cisco's owners in their governance of their company. Unless perhaps that governance might violate some kind of ethic that supercedes the simple capitalist/libertarian ethic of ownership rights to control. On what basis are you recommending shareholders resort to some kind of puny boycott, easily overwhelmed by Chinese purchases, rather than their rights to set the policies of their company? Do you really think that capitalism or libertarianism is reducible to domination of a product market, by a supplier or customer, without respecting the actual ownership of the company?

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  65. Worthy reading on corporate social responsibility by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1

    * Milton Friedman, PhD Nobel Laureate economist: http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/faculty/dunnweb/rprnts.f riedman.html

    * Gary Becker, PhD Nobel laureate U. of Chicago economist (still teaching!): http://www.becker-posner-blog.com/archives/2005/07 /do_corporations.html

    * Judge Richard Posner, economist and U.S. Federal judge: http://www.becker-posner-blog.com/archives/2005/07 /the_social_resp.html

    * The Economist magazine: http://www.economist.com/displaystory.cfm?story_id =3555212

  66. Companies do what their owners want by snowwrestler · · Score: 1

    Companies are out to make a profit not a political statement.

    Companies are out to do what their owners want them to do. Some, such as Patagonia, or Working Assets, do make political statements because their owner(s) want them to. Others, such as Nike have learned (been taught, actually) the economic advantages of corporate responsibility (and disadvantages of a lack thereof).

    Investors, i.e., the shareholders, want a monetary return, not a political return on their investment. As an investor in Cisco I would sell immediately if I knew Cisco was going to quit selling to one of the largest markets in existence because they were going to make a political statment

    Other investors want many things, some of which you might not care about. The way to find out what percentage of them want a certain thing is to poll them on it. Blocking such a poll based on the opinions of management is ridiculous. Management works for the owners.

    Only if all companies did this would that then make an impact. (And yes, I know you have to start somewhere, but why don't you start with the people in China first?)

    Because I don't own shares in the people of China.

    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
  67. I'm all for Government and shareholders by Travoltus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    regulating corporations.

    Usually when you allow someone to make a huge mess and leave someone else to clean it up, you have a big problem on your hands.

    We're giving billions in consumer dollars, intellectual property and factory construction and product development technology to one of the most undemocratic, misogynistic, anti-reproductive choice, pollution-happy, anti-workers rights nations on Earth.

    China is in every way the enemy of America except in war. Their way of life is absolutely opposed to ours.

    Would you have given such things to Nazi Germany even if they had not declared war on America? No. Well just about everything the Nazi's did to their people, the Chinese do and worse. All they haven't done is invade other nations. Whoops, I forgot, they invaded Tibet!

    By trading with China we are shooting workers' rights, human rights, democracy and even environmental policy reform, in the foot.

    Cisco's shareholders aren't going far enough; they should close down their factories in China. I'm tired of hearing all this kowtowing to the free market - China is proving that it can have free market "enterprise zones" without democracy and they have 20 of the world's most polluted cities. That Government is a black hole sucking the world into an endless downward spiral of decay in which absolute greed is trumping human rights.

    We're doing way more harm than good to the world by allowing corporations in the US to do business with despotic nations like China who refuse to reform their ways.

    As I said, the shareholders aren't going far enough with this.

    --
    --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
  68. I'm adding you to my friends list by Travoltus · · Score: 1

    That was the most insightful and wise comment by a business owner I've EVER read except my own boss who has said roughly the same thing. He owns this business, too.

    --
    --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
  69. Precisely by shmlco · · Score: 1
    Precisely. As you and other sources point out, Cisco is selling the same equipment to China they sell to anyone else.

    What are they supposed to do, cripple the software so it can't be misused? And would China buy it if they did?

    --
    Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    1. Re:Precisely by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      So it can't be "misused"? That kind of functionality is what firewalls are FOR, FFS.

      Whiners want the software to not be able to be USED at all, or more accurately, for Cisco to tell China to "bugger off and die."

      Yahuh. That'll happen. And before I'll accept that "its what the shareholders want" I want to know what PERCENT of shares are held by the twits calling for this.

  70. Missing The Point - Shareholders and Value by Shihar · · Score: 1

    I think that people are missing the point of what a companies responsibility to share holders are. When you own a share, you own a piece of that company In owning a piece of that company, a share holder has say over how that company is run. Normally, share holders simply demand a return on investment in cash. However, there are other things that a share holder can value, and share holder is will within his rights to demand these things. For instance, a share holder might very well value long term investments over short term investments. They might care about the image of the company, if for no other reason then that the image might impact sales. They are also well within their right to value non-monetary things, like freedom, morality, and what not. If Cisco share holders demand that Cisco not only make profit, but also uphold a certain basic moral code in the process, that is well within their rights as partial owners of the company.

    People act like this is some abnormality. The truth is that it happens all the time. Many companies throw on a layer of ethics that they follow without the government enforcing them. For some companies, this means meeting a higher standard of pollution control then is required. For others it means that they ensure certain labor practices are followed. If the owners of Cisco want to do something similar, I applaud the action and say more power to them. This is capitalism at work. The share holders are demanding added value for their stocks. If the share holders value freedom, it is their prerogative to demand that the company they own offers more. People forget that capitalism isn't all about money. Capitalism is about value. It just so happens that money is the thing people can generally agree to value. If on the other hand people decide that they want to value something else, capitalism is more then happy to accommodate. I say three cheers for Cisco's share holders. I would rather Cisco's share holders regulate their company then the government.

  71. And Cisco's a public company by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    Meaning they are bound to do what their shareholders tell them to. The shareholders aren't required to respect China's wishes, they can decide they'd rather Cisco doesn't sell to China, and Cisco will ahve to do that. Remember: Buying stock in a company is actually buying partial ownership of that company. Now most peopel just buy for investment purposes, and don't buy enough to have any sort of significant stake anyhow. However, if you get together enough people with enough shares to get a majority vote on something, you can change what the company is doing.

  72. Better start boycotting everything then by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    Cisco is the Alpha and the Omega of networking. They have such a large peice of the high end market it's just amazing. I suppose if you tried you could find large shops that are 100% non-Cisco, but it'd be hard. They are big to Microsoft porportions.

    You'd have to boycott the Internet more or less, hard to ahve a packet go anywhere and not pass through at least one Cisco device.

    They own Linksys now too, so they have a singificant small-market share as well.

  73. People Are the Problem, Not Capitalism by Shihar · · Score: 1

    Capitalism is about value. It just so happens that most people value money. It however does not mean that you can't create an entity within capitalism to that cares about something other then money. Private charities are an excellent example. Charities do not work outside of capitalism. Capitalism has nothing against charities. If people want to shell out money to a charity to receive a warm fuzzy glow in their hearts, more power to them. American charities pump out more money to charitable causes then most governments.

    My point is that capitalism is amoral. It doesn't care about money, charity, or anything else. Capitalism is simply a way of using and distributing scarce resources. If everyone valued the environment, social justice, and freedom above all else, companies would find a way to work tirelessly towards those ends. If people bought stock based upon how much it returned in social good, companies would all work towards social good.

    Now, clearly this is not the case. People don't buy stock (normally) on how much social good they pump out. They buy stock based upon how much profit they can return the share holders. There is a trend though to incorporate social good into the decision to invest in corporations. There are entire investment firms out there that rate companies based upon the social good or harm that they cause and invest accordingly. The effects are fairly clear. There are companies out there that have altered their business model to be more social responsible. They have written it into their own internal regulations that they will meet certain social standards.

    Personally, I think this is a good trend. It simply reinforces what companies already try and do. Companies try and bring value to their share holders. It is important to note the use of the word 'value' over the use of the word 'money'. Money certainly has value, but share holders can choose to value other things. If share holders say that they value social good in addition to money, then corporations will readily alter their business products to give share holders more value.

    Governments are a crutch used to overcome people's greed and indifference for one another. If suddenly everyone in the world was altruistic and acted upon altruistic convictions, you could do away with governments and live in a perfect capitalistic and moralistic system. Governments exist to regulate capitalism not because capitalism is greedy or evil, but because people are. People are the problem, not capitalism. If people are acting better, as seen in this instance with Cisco, then you naturally see capitalism act better.

  74. Why freedom of expression is important by typical · · Score: 1

    Well, the origins of "freedom of speech" in the US were "freedom of political speech". It just got expanded a bit. However, since political speech is exactly what the PRC is interested in squelching, it's still relevant.

    There's a couple assumptions you'll have to go along with me on, though.

    (Ass.1) That an organized society is better (more productive, more able to deal with various problems, and so forth) than a collection of unorganized individuals.

    (Ass.2) That the cost of collapse of a society is extremely high, and that it is strongly preferable to avoid this.

    So now, we can extrapolate a bit:

    Given Ass.1, we want a society. Given Ass.2, we want it to be stable. So one of the most important characteristics of a society is that it be stable.

    Societies can self-correct out of downward spirals. For example, suppose a military coup results in an unpopular dictator -- he can be ousted as he makes people more and more desperate and angry.

    Freedom of speech is a simple and valuable characteristic in a society that allows popular removal of its leaders (such as by vote each four years, as in the US), because it allows awareness of problems someone has identified in a leader to spread. If someone can figure out that George Bush is starting an insane economic plan that will destroy the country in less than ten years, they can spread word about it. The alternative would be to keep the masses, which control the government, unaware of problems coming up, and could allow a leader to cause a country to make actions that would generally disadvantageous, but advantageous to the leaders.

    So free speech helps allow society to self-correct and avoid crashing.

    This is also why we have the freedom to keep and bear arms in the United States, incidently. It's another mechanism to retain societal stability, though oriented towards more drastic problems. The idea is that no unpopular ruler can seize power because there are many people with guns that would shoot the people supporting him. Since someone knows that their unpopular coup will be put down, they will not engage in it in the first place.

    This pretty much covers why freedom of political speech is important.

    Pure freedom of speech also has some other benefits -- in general, assuming rational agents (which we aren't, but we try to approximate them), more knowledge is better, and speech allows the spread of knowledge.

    If you want a document, try the one on Wikipedia.

    --
    Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    1. Re:Why freedom of expression is important by Decessus · · Score: 1

      Thanks, I appreciate the information.

  75. Re:Pray to St. Pancake! (Patron Saints of moonbats by James+Cape · · Score: 1

    For some reason, the depths of depravity that humanity is willing to plunge -- in this case, celebrating the death of a young woman and then claiming she "inspired" some terrorist act against the Fullbright scholarship people because she didn't like watching people's homes get buldozed and had some choice words about Bush -- never ceases to disgust me. I don't celebrate the deaths of the Fullbright people, or the Israeli people, or the Palestinian people, or Ms. Corrie. None of them deserved to die.

    Secondly, if you really think that bulldozing someone's house is a way to stop terrorism, you aren't thinking too hard. The house isn't strapping dynamite to it's chest and running into a market -- though the newly homeless former residents may well consider it in retaliation. Perhaps I am wrong, but I would think her presence (and subsequent murder) would actually lessen terrorism against U.S. citizens, as she has illustrated that there are people in the States that are willing to go as far as can be gone for other people when we conclude they're getting fucked over -- even if those peoples' religion is Islam, their nationality is Palestinian, and the fucking is taking place with the support of our government and businesses.

    Oh, and so long as we're throwing regurgitated, "disconnect brain, engage mouth" ad-hominems in favor of a reasoned debate, if I repeat "bloody wingnut" 5 times, will you step through my mirror and try to kill me?

    Finally, this tangent is so rediculously offtopic for a discussion of Cisco, China, censorship, and corporate responsibility as to be laughable.

  76. Why troll? by thjayoromanov · · Score: 1

    Can somebody answer me why post above is modded troll? We all know that Fidel is a lil' nuts, but, the post above does have a point.

  77. Revoking Linux License to the China Govt. by Donny+Smith · · Score: 1

    When you think of it, it's almost 100% sure that there are many Linux systems out there being used for human rights-surpressing purposes by the Chinese government.

    Which makes me think what would happen if the community (or Linus himself) got pissed off and revoked licenses to use the kernel (or certain GPL packages, or the OS itself)...

  78. So why isn't this in the Vision Statement? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Make pots of money".

    None of them say that, but apparently that is their main (nay, only) goal.

    Maybe it doesn't ring right to the individual investors. However, I think it ought to take off with VC.

  79. Corporate responsibility. by elucido · · Score: 0

    Thats the new theme. Corporations have to be socially responsible, or they will piss off their shareholders, its that simple. Government has nothing to do with it.

  80. Bingo by elucido · · Score: 0

    You just envoked Goldwin's law. Godwin's law has been replaced by Goldwin's law. According to Goldwin's law anyone who resorts to using Godwin's law to avoid conversations about the Nazi's is a secret supporter of them.

    1. Re:Bingo by lifespan · · Score: 0

      Wow, we don't have a huge Jewish presence in Australia so I don't really care if they deliberately misinterpret something I say (or don't say in this case) in order to publicly humiliate me and suppress my opinion.

      --
      -- Howto: Get +5 (1) Whine about M$ (2) Namedrop Gentoo (3) Casually Abuse Mods (4) Namedrop Early Computer Model
  81. What is wrong with Capitalism? by elucido · · Score: 0

    The USA is a capitalist plutocracy. Thats what capitalism does.

    The difference is, we actually have jobs and run our own businesses, and because our economy is mature we can buy our freedom, while China's economy is just getting started.

    If you want human rights for China then support their economy because freedom and economics are combined as one. Just let the Chinese buy their freedom like everyone else. When the Chinese people have enough money to select their leaders, then they will, its really that simple.

    1. Re:What is wrong with Capitalism? by Dogtanian · · Score: 1

      The difference is, we actually have jobs and run our own businesses, and because our economy is mature we can buy our freedom, while China's economy is just getting started.

      The USA did not gain freedom through economic prosperity; the freedom came first, then the prosperity.

      If you want human rights for China then support their economy because freedom and economics are combined as one.

      Well, economic importance hasn't done much for personal freedoms in Saudi Arabia; on the contrary, the oil is the reason the Saudi Royal family is being propped up by the west (espec. the USA).

      Which, not coincidentally is also where Wahabi Muslim extremism is being bred- not Iraq. I mean, really, anyone paying even the remotest bit of attention to Middle East politics could figure out that Saudi Arabia is a million times more relevant to Al Qaeda than a dictator in a relatively secular country ever was.

      Anyway, I'm sorry, I don't buy that economic 'prosperity' automatically implies freedom. It's probably hard to have freedom in an extremely impoverished society, but the converse doesn't always follow. Look how far China's got already without significantly increasing its level of freedom.

      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
  82. Sweden's been having some liquidity problems... by Wolfhart · · Score: 0

    ..so I suggest we export crack to the U.S. Hey, the shareholders and citizens agree, profit is more important than oppression of freedom and since I value freedom higher than money, distributing it directly to teenagers would mean a shorter time to market, guaranteeing a quick ROI (Return Of Investment).
    Cisco leads the way, let's just be quick to follow because coorps are except from human behaviour.

  83. pithy quote... by tree_frog · · Score: 1

    All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.
            Edmund Burke

  84. Did you even read his post? by wilsonao · · Score: 1

    Or did you just want to clod him? His statements can be backed up if you actually researched it instead of just throwing around random insults.

    1. Re:Did you even read his post? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your right I was a bit harsh but I'm tired of people spinning various historically examples of profit coming at the expense of any sense of morality or social justice.

            No doubt there were places in the US where slavery did not represent cheap labour. However this clearly was not the case in the south or else they would have done away with slaves already. They certainly didn't keep them for the goodness of their heart.

            I am am not against a mixed economy. Unfortunately though the polical climate today is to spin ever historical example of social injustice to make it fit into a model of laisse faire capitalism..... when clearly it does not always work.

            For instance please explain to me how we can fix global warming problem without the aid of government? If you visit Objectivst websites (try google) they will tell you it isn't even happening because it interferes with their ideology.

            ~ madness

  85. trade with China by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    If the U.S. government were acting in the interest of the people and the long term health of the U.S. as a nation it would be erecting trade barriers, raising tariffs on Chinese goods, and withdrawing most favored status.

    While I don't like it there's one BIG problem in erecting trade barriers to Chinese goods, the government deficit spending and growing debt. China is one of the two biggest owners of US treasury bonds, simply Bush is selling the country to China. Selling" Haha, he's making sure your grandkids will be required to spend half of their income paying China all the interest China collects from all those IOUs Bush handed to them. That is unless trade is tightened but then if so then China can flood the market with all those bonds driving up the interest the US government will have to pay to finance it's mushrooming deficit.

    Under Bush's watch the US government went from the biggest budget surplus to it's biggest deficit. Now that he's starving the government of operations funds he needs to reduce the size of the government not increase it's size!!!

    Falcon
  86. Chinese invasions by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    They are illegally occupying many thousand sq. km. of our territory (just like Pakistan) and all this happened with the blessings of the US.

    In 1959 China also invaded and still occupies another nation, Tibet. But before that invasion some 2 million Chinese Nationalist being driven from China invaded the island of Formosa suppressing 20 million Formosans or Taiwanese. Ooh I see you mention Tibet too.

    ``28 February 1947''
    Taiwan's Holocaust Remembered

    Take the worst possible example of rights violation you can think of. I guess you're thinking of the Nazis.

    Nope! By the end of WWII during Stalin's reign some 20 million Russians lost their lives because of Stalin.

    Falcon

    Free Tibet!!!