Taiwan Irked at Google's Version of Earth
frank_adrian314159 writes "As reported in The Register, Taiwan wants Google Earth to stop calling it a province of China. Although Google has yet to comment on this issue, it will be interesting to see the brightest minds that money can buy trying to solve what decades of diplomats have unsuccessfully wrestled with - how to balance the nationalistic pride of the inhabitants of Taiwan against the nationalistic pride of the inhabitants of mainland China." From the article: "Foreign ministry spokesman, Michel Lu, explained: 'It is incorrect to call Taiwan a province of China because we are not. We have contacted Google to express our position and asked them to correct the description.' Google has maintained a stony silence on the matter, presumably while it tries to work out a solution which will please both the Taiwanese and the hosts of the (lucrative, burgeoning, inviting) Chinese internet search business opportunity market."
Instead of choosing between pissing off the Chinese or pissing off the Taiwanese you piss both the Chinese and Taiwanese off at the same time. So instead of saying it is or isn't a province of China, you just call it West Hawaii.
Problem solved.
--
You didn't know.
It can't be that hard for google to fix that problem, so what's with the "stony silence"?
Add me as a friend!
How about making it user customisable with defaults based on their geographical location?
Heck, many times Google Earth screws up naming, and it'd be nice to have names using i18n.
-- perl -e'print pack"H*","6e656d6f406d38792e6f7267"'
Maybe they already figured out which side their bread was buttered on. After all, they are pretty sharp. They don't have to solve anything. They made the smart move in trying to get cozy with the next economic superpower. Now they can just ignore the complaining until it goes away.
"I don't know half of you half as well as I should like, and I like less than half of you half as well as you deserve."
Question: Who does Google stand to make more money off of?
Google already knows the answer to this and that is why "Taiwan" is listed as such.
End of story. (For Taiwan at least)
Dr.O
---- The real Slashdot is still here. You just have to browse at -1 to read the comments.
Why not just call it "Taiwan"?
They've chosen to call Taiwan a province of China. Because the most lucrative market that likely to crop up in the next 20 years says Taiwan is a province of China.
It's a political debate, right up until you consider that one side of the debate represents much more money than the other. Then it's a simple matter of economics.
It is pretty much well established in the west to refer to to China (the big one) as the People's Republic of China and Taiwan as the Republic of China. This may be offensive to China or Taiwan, I can not attest to that, but it does seem to be the norm.
How does "We Love Katamari" refer to Taiwan in the global level? I assume the King of All Cosmos is the ultimate authority.
I hate to say it but this type of thing was predicted in Dianetics. It will start as samll tussles, but eventually the Taiwan issue will be decided by force.
A simple Troll, born of Rock and Fire, leaving in the basement of my parents volcano and typing on an asbestos keyboard.
that our country decided to hang the Taiwanese out to dry by engaging with China. Taiwan should be our real aly and we shouldn't be trading with China at all. If we had pursued that policy, I think that the PRC goverment would have fallen when the rest of the communist block fell and China would be free by now.
Thanks, Nixon (for nothing).
Avoid Missing Ball for High Score
a province of China
It's not a province, it's a Republic of China. That's why the labels on manufactured goods say "Made in Taiwan ROC".
It's interesting to note that Tibet also does not show up as an independent country in Google Earth. Apparently Google doesn't consider supporting an evil communist regime to be "evil".
-73, de n1ywb
www.n1ywb.com
Surely be google are capable of quick soloutions, but perhaps the slow "reply" is more tied up in politics than it seems, cant be easy to debate between these foreign powers as another country, let alone as a company that could be severly burned by the loss of favour by one of them
XML - A clever joke would be here if
a "/" I.e. Taiwan (ROC/Province of PRC)
Or call it just plain ol' Taiwan.
Or hey, even better, give it a name based on originating IP.
How very Provincial!
Highest bidder wins the ownership of Taiwan on google map!
Google could always say they are using the ISO country names (and I think they are) and they will be happy to change it when ISO updates the name in their data.
("Kowtows to China" -- sometimes I crack myself up...)
So much for the "do no evil" schtick, huh?
Hey, once upon a time Gates was the clever, driven College drop-out sticking it to the Man, too, right? Eventually, they all embrace their inner Gekko.
Mebbe one of their two billionaire founders will sleep with his sister by mistake and the whole modern Greek Tragedy can be complete.
*sigh*
what's for lunch... haven't eaten lunch... starving...
Does it really take the brightest minds to fix this problem?
if (IP == Taiwan){
Label as independent
}
else {
Label as province of China
}
LINUX ONLINE POKER: Linux Poker
...can they sort out the whole India / Pakistan / Kashmir thing too? That'd be great. Thanks.
-Rob
Biblical fiscal responsibility
Paul Kennedy said we should just send in the 7th fleet. That should solve it.
Taiwan might be able to get Google to change... they sure as hell aren't going to get global recognition...
Sadly, Taiwan is doomed unless the US wants to provoke a third world war... which I hope to God they don't.
Google is "calling it in the air" as they say.
MoM++ - A Classic Expanded - [Master of Magic 1.5]
http://mompp.sourceforge.net/
The text next to the map says "Taiwan, Province of China" ... the maps themselves don't actually imply it is part of China (as far as I could notice). This means it is a very easy change for Google to implement, no edit of the maps or code needed. They just need to decide what to do politically.
A note, Taiwan is not asking for "Taiwan, Province of China" to become "Taiwan, an independant nation" ... perhaps all provinces of all nations should conveniently lose such descriptors? How could that anger The PRC?
Use my userscript to add story images to Slashdot. There's no going back.
If the school bully says you have to say "uncle", that doesn't mean he's suddenly your real uncle...
In Sowjet Russia, all your Taiwan are belong to us
or something.
Labrador (up North in Canada) has been disputed territory for years. Maps were showing it as "disputed territory".
Then again, Canadians are not very likely to go up in arms if they are reminded of it when seeing a map.
C.
Unless Taiwan comes out and decalres its sovereignty, no one really needs to consider it as anything else. I mean, it'll mean war, but at least they get themselves on Google Earth right. But honestly, sack up or shut up.
Who else thinks that Google didn't actually make these kinds of decisions? There's probably some body or convention that they're following--I just don't know which one.
Whether or not Taiwan will become part of China in the future it is certainly not the case now.
Yeesh!
Google and Yahoo are becoming buttkissing money mongers for China business ties.
Anyway... No offense to Taiwan or China.
When they do stuff like this:
http://pekingduck.org/archives/002969.php
Bow to the communist china's wishes, just like msn did with the "democracy" ban. The real question is will you anti-ms people be just as outraged as you were with MS?
Most countries, including America, do not see Taiwan as independent. Because of this, the UN does not either. If this is good enough for the UN, this should be good enough for Google (an American company).
Phase 1: Help China harden it's information rights policy by catering to it's search restrictions, then, give them political leverage by legitimizing the Chinese claim to Taiwan (and collect underpants). Phase 2: Wait on them to acheive true superpower status. Phase 3: Profit!
Google does business in China. China exerts extraordinary control over any company "priviledged" to operate inside china.
Therefore, Google Earth will reflect China's beliefs.
-Adam
Google is probably adhering to ISO 3166 as found here:
a /10faq/frequently-asked-questions.html#QS03
http://www.iso.org/iso/en/prods-services/iso3166m
03: Why is Taiwan named Taiwan Province of China in ISO 3166-1?
A: The names in ISO 3166-1 - and thus on our Webpage - are taken from United Nations sources. These sources are authoritative inputs to the international country code standard. They are:
* The United Nations Bulletin Country Names and the
* Country and Region Codes for Statistical Use of the United Nations Statistics Division
Since Taiwan is not a UN member it does not figure in the UN bulletin on country names. The printed edition of the publication Country and region codes for statistical use gives the name we use in ISO 3166-1. By adhering to UN sources the ISO 3166/MA stays politically neutral.
Just call it Formosa. done.
That's the one Google will suck.
Kinda hard to "do no evil" when different people have different definitions.
Google needs to grow a pair and stand up on this issue rather than silently ignoring it and hoping it will go away.
"I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey
"Google Earth portrays an imaginary planet. Any ressemblance with real Earth is purely coincidential. Google Earth is for entertainment only. Do not use Google Earth to learn about political divisions. If dissatisfied with Google Earth, you may reuse Google Earth as a flotation device."
bet they will go the easiest/simplest route and make a version for "viewed inside tawain" and a version "rest of the world"
It's a pity that the moderators can't recognize flamebait when they see it.
It really depends on how you define "independence."
If by "independent" you mean the existence of a sovereign government, an army, and a legal structure, then by all means Taiwan is independent. If by "independent" you mean recognized by everyone else, then they're not.
As an example, if you try to go to Taiwan, ROC with a PROC visa, you'll be laughed at. The leaders in Taiwan are democratically elected, they have their own army, currency, health care system, business regulations, the whole works. As far as I'm concerned, that's pretty darn independent.
If you're looking at the view of whether they *should* be independent, that's where a lot of the debate comes in. In PROC the view is that historically Taiwan was part of the PROC, so it should be reunited with the motherland. This particular belief is pretty strong on the mainland due to nationalistic pride and control of the newspapers. In Taiwan, people just want the right to elect their own leaders democratically; regardless of where they stand on the reunification issue, they don't want to turn into another Hong Kong, and that is the public relations problem that PROC is faced with. They want to maintain an authoritarian government over a population that is used to publicly berating its own leaders.
yours,
kbs
I'm sure this will be moddded offtopic, but...
Why isn't there a Google section on the navigation bar on the left?
If there's an infrequently updated Apache section,
surely Google deserves one as well.
It seems like 50% off all stories lately are Google related.
A good test for that ever-famous item 6 on the ten things (part of the official corporate philosophy).
6. You can make money without doing evil.
Do they follow Yahoo's lead, and cater to the very oppressive Chinese gov? Or do they support a democracy that has been around just as long as China really, having been created in more or less the same instance. China, after all, has no less claim to being the authority over Taiwan than Taiwan has to being the authority over China.
How about it Google...gona "do no evil" here?
>Foreign ministry spokesman, Michel Lu, explained:
>'It is incorrect to call Taiwan a province of China because we are not.
Totally ridiculous. Considering that only four banana republics have diplomatic relations with Taiwan, they don't need a foreign ministry at all. Every other country recognizes the One China as the Red China. Taiwan is not even in the UN. They are the dwarf who pretends to be the giant, but their heydays are long gone.
When mainland chinese missiles start to fall on them they will cry for US mommy. If the taiwanese had any grey matter left in their heads they would reunite now, with the offered one country, two systems principle to preserve current internal politics and economy as is. Red China is backed by Russian military tech and soon will be able to take out unwilling taiwanese leadership with precision strikes. Then the decapitated island will then be taken by force and lose any chance to prevent forced assimilation.
Taiwanese think they can replicate Turkey's luck with the Crimean War in 1855, but they are fatally flawed. The opponent is much stronger now and the established powers can do little to counter it, because their own economic survival depends on mainland China. Nowadays nothing is being manufactured in USA, the only revenue is from services sector but hairdressers and executives are ain't worth sh*t in case of war.
I seem to recall some Microsoft program, perhaps Encarta or Office, that did something to piss off the Chinese government. Something to do with flags, I think? Microsoft issued a patch rather quickly. Does anyone remember this?
Bill Clinton: Pimp we can believe in. - The Shirt!!!
All Google needs to say is it will be fixed in the final release, once its out of beta... Problem solved indefinately
-FL
Managing Google's Idea Factory
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/05_4
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." - Martin Luther King, Jr.
I know it's a troll....But I feel oblige to reply.
This is just the type of mentality that is so prevalent in North America. Not all americans are closed-minded, ignorant racists, but a great many are. These comments and attitudes just smears the rest of the population in the eye of the international community. Better results can be obtained by these people if they went out to look for a job, or doing something constructive. But, then again, what useful things can they do?
Taiwan *IS* a province of China, actually. But the exact situation is complicated.
You folks may remember when the Taiwanese legislature was planning to declare independence, and mainland threats made them back down? Well, if there weren't any ties to the mainland, why would they need to declare independence at all?
The reason is that, when Mao Tse-Tung's army took over the Chinese mainland and China's original rulers relocated to Taiwan, the old government maintained a claim to being the government of the mainland. In their eyes they were a province of China as a whole, despite the rest of the country being controlled by interlopers.
Now, over time, they realized the Communist regime, while it's gotten a bit more flexible, wasn't going away. Their own government changed in the meantime, too. And while they've gotten to the point where they no longer consider themselves to be the same country as the mainland, by having laid claim to being the only legitimate part of the original government they're still tied together.
Will that mean an end to our little plastic toys/trinkets?
search for "taiwan" in google.
i was feeling lucky and ended up in CIA factbook. And taiwan is listed as a country there.
eom
?
Click here or here.
if address=".cn"
islandname="Province of China"
else
islandname="Taiwan"
Call mainland China a province of Taiwan. It's not entirely without basis. he government in Taiwan is the older one, once was the government of all China. The mainland just happens to be under the control of communist rebels at the moment.
Are you tired of endless, bureaucratic discussions with international diplomats? Well worry no more! Google will sort out all your petty squabbles for you, with no interference and just a few text based ads appended to your country's constitution.
Google International Diplomacy integrates fully with existing Google packages. Connect that red "President Phone" to Google Talk! Search for the name of a country's Prime Minister with Google Google!
"If Taiwan is so independent why doesn;t it have a seat on the UN ?"
Why isn't the US part of the World Criminal Court?
Why isn't Norway and Iceland members of the European Union?
Why hasn't Atlantis melted all of Antartica's ice that its buried under?
And most importantly...
Why hasn't an American cable channel picked up (new) Doctor Who yet?
"Right now, somewhere in this world, Scott Baio is plowing a woman he doesn't love," - Peter Griffin, *Family Guy*
I feel so sorry by people who were sucked into a pseudo-religion started by a Sci-Fi writer on a bar bet just to make money.
When you search for Poland on Google Maps, you'll get... "Polish People's Republic", which is the name of the Soviet-dependant communist country which existed in the years 1952-1989. A lot of Poles find it offensive to have their country listed under this name instead of "Republic of Poland". Lots of them have sent mail to Google, but they don't give a sh*t about it.
Google Earth sucks, too. If you want to find the town of Chojnów in Lower Silesia, Poland, you won't achieve it by searching for "Chojnów". That would be just too easy, wouldn't it? This town is actually listed with its former, pre-1945 German name "Hainau" (and that's the wrong spelling, since the German name was Haynau, not Hainau). The same applies to many other cities in Western and South-Western Poland. It's comparable to having "New York" listed as "Nieuw Amsterdam". ;-))
So it seems that Google Maps is using pre-1989 data, and Google Earth is based upon pre-1945 data. (Hey, it's consistent with Taiwan being a province of the mainland China, because it was one then).
A wiki type map would take the responsibility off their shoulders AND save them work. I guess it would be a wikiwar then tho. Hmmm. Store BOTH types of map and make the most popular one the default?
The government that is running Taiwan today is called the Republic of China. This is the government established by the Nationalist Party, which overthrew the imperial Qing Dynasty about a century ago. This is also the government that fought alongside the Allies in WWII against Japan, and is a permanent member of the UN Security Council.
After WWII, the government lost mainland China to the communists in civil war, and retreated to Taiwan. The communists then formed the People's Republic of China, and took over the Security Council seat and UN membership a couple of decades later.
Today, Taiwan maintains an independent executive, legislative, and judicial system, with police and military power. It also maintains diplomatic relationships with about two dozen small countries. It is not in the UN primarily because of the unfortunate zero-sum diplomatic contest that has been ongoing for decades now. Put simply, the PRC would not allow Taiwan into the UN, and most governments do not recognize Taiwan because the PRC would sever relations if they did.
I've head quite a few boxes on them that say Taiwan, ROC on them so I guess not even everyone there shares the same opinion.
Taiwan is ruled by the Republic of China, not the People's Republic of China. The problem at hand is that by saying "Taiwan, China", people (like you, no offense) will mistake it for the People's Republic of China. Over the years, a good number of native (meaning, arrived in Taiwan before 1949) Taiwanese have grown to resent the repressive Nationalist rule, and there is now some negative reaction to the name "China". The Nationalists have since lost power in elections, and the new ruling party has tried what it can to ditch the "China" altogether and achieve an independent "Taiwan", but this remains the most divisive political issue on the island.
as for me, what the hell do I know about it !
OK. Stop bullshitting on China affairs.
Because of your bullshitting (mostly western powers in around 1900s), China was separated into two parts. Until now, the trouble still exists and is being amplified. When, when can you people, your government just shut up and let China alone. In that way, China may get peace sooner.
Learn something about strategy and tactics. Attacking an island the size of Taiwan is tantamount to suicide. Why do you think China has held off? It's not because of the US. It's because they'd get cut into mulch on the beaches.
A better argument can be made with these 3 "states" that the USA "bought" (read stole, murdered for) from Mexico.
Isn't it ironic that these three "states" are slowly reverting back to its rightful owner. The largest demographic in these states are now Latinos (mostly Mexican-origin).
It's better to clean up your OWN house before you comment on someone else's! But alas, such things never happen in the "great US of A"...
Google is a US company (primarily). If they don't want to go to the extent of portraying Taiwan differently based on the user's geographic location, it would make sense for them to follow the official stance of the US government.
Did anyone else notice that they have a street map of Japan now? It's all in Japanese only, though, which is less useful. Does anyone know what the triangle thingies mean? Mountains, I'd kinda guess.
They have building outlines, too, which is pretty darn nifty.
Laws do not persuade just because they threaten. --Seneca
This is very objective:
In 1895, military defeat forced China to cede Taiwan to Japan. Taiwan reverted to Chinese control after World War II. Following the Communist victory on the mainland in 1949, 2 million Nationalists fled to Taiwan and established a government using the 1946 constitution drawn up for all of China. Over the next five decades, the ruling authorities gradually democratized and incorporated the native population within the governing structure. In 2000, Taiwan underwent its first peaceful transfer of power from the Nationalist to the Democratic Progressive Party. Throughout this period, the island prospered and became one of East Asia's economic "Tigers." The dominant political issues continue to be the relationship between Taiwan and China - specifically the question of eventual unification - as well as domestic political and economic reform.
Germany is actually Deutchland. Greece is actually Hellas. The Sea of Gallilee is actualy the Kinneret. ...
Yet, we all know who/what people are talking of.
Oh well, what the hell...
That'd be fun to watch...
"We are all geniuses when we dream"
- E.M. Cioran
Unless one is running a publicly owned company, where the shareholders can file a lawsuit against company execs for failing to maximize profitability. And China is a large untapped market.
Reminds me of that Dilbert from early 2004. Just replace "quality" with "do no evil":
- First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
using infallible logic I lean towards believing 1.3 billion people vs. 23 million people that Taiwan is province of China
Just take Taiwan off the maps and pretend it doesn't exist.
...just call them both: "Walmart Factory Zones"
Here's a mind boggling idea. Why don't you just call it Taiwan and let them figure it out?
The government of Taiwan views itself as the "Republic of China," the legitimate government of all of China, of which Taiwan is a part. Officially, they too view Taiwan as a province of China -- the only province under the control of the legitimate Chinese government, as it happens. What exactly is the problem here?
jf
The cold war ended when Russia started running IBM servers, in the same way; Google is using Chinese market penetration, and appeasement of Communist officials to infiltrate the market to the point where Google has such 'capital' within Chinese society that it can then wait for the opportune time to represent American values of democracy and freedom of speech, dont take it from me i just work for google part time.
Google is adhering to ISO. If Taiwan joins the UN and pushes to change ISO to reflect that they are independent, then Google will update Earth to the show that. Nothing evil is going on here. Nothing similar to MS's previous actions is happening. The parent is simply stating his/her ignorant opinion. Move on, mods.
Nevvvvver! For the last time people, Taiwan is NOT a province/rogue state/Hawaii/appendage/chicken foot of China. It is just good ol' plain Taiwan. If you must add Republic Of to amuse yourself, go ahead, but Taiwan is just Taiwan.
I know there are enough missiles aimed at Taiwan right now from China to take the island out all in one shot, but we Taiwanese will not let this kind of mistake slide!
My Chinese husband, on the other hand, is waving his little commie flag at his desk to celebrate. He thinks I should start learning to read Simplified Chinese soon, just in case, you know, the Chinese takes over the world.
Ahhhh domestic bliss.
TFA says they want to be called the Republic of Taiwan on Google Earth. My understanding is they aren't even called that at home -- that's what they would be called if the declared independence. Right now, I thought the government of Taiwan was the Republic of China -- which also claims to be the rightful government of the mainland (territory under the control of the People's Republic of China); meanwhile the PROC claims to be the rightful government of Taiwan (territory under control of the ROC). I hadn't been under the impression that there was any official disagreement over whether or not Taiwan was part of China, just over which Chinese government was legitimate had what legitimacy/international standing and where.
"Totally ridiculous. Considering that only four banana republics have diplomatic relations with Taiwan, they don't need a foreign ministry at all. Every other country recognizes the One China as the Red China. Taiwan is not even in the UN. They are the dwarf who pretends to be the giant, but their heydays are long gone."
:)
North Korea is not a member of the UN.
And there are plenty of people in the US that would like to see the US pull out of the UN, and evict the UN out of the US.
Tongue tied?
"Right now, somewhere in this world, Scott Baio is plowing a woman he doesn't love," - Peter Griffin, *Family Guy*
Because China will sever all political ties with any countries (or the UN) that DO recognize Taiwan. It really has nothing to do with the countries in question actually not agreeing with Taiwan's stance, but simply it has to do with not wanting to piss off China (whatever your need or motivations are for caring). Those countries that do recognize Taiwan generally don't care about China, or do it for principle (i.e. the Vatican).
Google should make it a tick box, so the user can choose whether the map should show independent or not.
Here is a partial list of others:
Anybody want a peanut?
Since when does Google have the power and responsability of recognizing foreign nations? They are an American (as in USA) company there I'd expect them to respect the US Department of State's (right or wrong) position on this matter. If the US doesn't recognize Taiwan as an independent nation then why should Google?
"The U.S. does not support Taiwan independence. President Bush clearly stated U.S. policy on December 9, 2003."
http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/35855.htm/
I'd really like to see Google port their engine to World of Warcraft so that I can zoom around kalimdor and maybe even see people running around in real time.
I see so much similarity between Taiwan and Canada. ... (pause) ...
Canada, C'mon. I'm just fucking with you. You know, I love you, right?
In PROC the view is that historically Taiwan was part of the PROC
To be technical, in "PRC" the view is that historically Taiwan was part of "China" (as opposed to "PRC" specifically). And because "PRC" is now the one and only "China", Taiwan should reunite with mother "China".
Taiwan is as much "historically part of PRC" as it is currently is part of PRC. The PRC government never ruled Taiwan. Various Chinese dynasties, as well as the ROC government, did/does. The rights PRC claim over Taiwan is only under the One China Principle, not because they thought Taiwan used to be part of the PRC.
You got everything else pretty much right though (-:
Warning: Sig Fault. Dumping warp core.
Independent Province of China has my vote.
Actually, it's more than China won't let it, and the other countries are too scared of pissing off China so they don't (officially) support Taiwan. Of course, the US supports Taiwan in plenty of other ways (including militarily) but just won't cross that line because it would probably cause WWIII.
Minor distinction I feel is important to make.
Yeah, you're full of shit. If you try bullying Taiwan with missiles, you can kiss your already declining economy goodbye. NO country is going to want to have anything to do with you. If you try taking the island by force, you can look forward to getting your ass kicked by the U.S. Navy AND kissing your economy goodbye. You don't have any naval power whatsoever, save for a couple of Sovremnsky class frigates, even your supersonic cruise-missiles can be taken out by the USN's new Aegis systems with Evolved Sea Sparrow, and the PLAAF is nothing but a bunch of old soviet crap piloted by a bunch of unexperienced, shitty pilots, and China's lack of airable land would make feeding your huge population quite difficult without U.S. food imports (take a look at how much food your country imports from the U.S. sometime) so you can look forward to another "Great Leap Forward" style famine if you try to take that route, too. Actually, you're right. If you want to take Taiwan back, you'd better do it as soon as possible. Russia has been experiencing a huge brain-drain ever since the collapse of the Soviet Union, so that "Russian tech" you've been talking about really isn't going to be anything special in the next 20 years, and by the year 2020, HALF of your country's population will be over the age of 65 (take a look at what that did to the Japanese economy, then multiply it by 10 due to your excessive population and lack of infastructure) so you won't have the purchasing power to buy all of that nifty stuff anyway. Better get cracking there, little red soldier.
google can solve this with a radio button. If a user wants to view it as a province of china, then they could toggle back and forth...the default option, well...on Tuesdays...
It's really ironic that Google, being part of the Capitalist herd, will probably not recognize Taiwan's independence in this matter because of the future $$$ potential in China, a Communist country in stark contrast to Capitalism. Capitalism, though it efficiently produces the best at the fastest rate, has no concern for the resources it burns for its achievements nor does it have any concern for things like human rights, morals, and the like. Only money talks with Capitalism, and it will be it's demise. I'm certainly not promoting Communism here. Both systems are fatally flawed.
http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/ tw.html#Govt
conventional long form: none
conventional short form: Taiwan
I don't know what the fuss is about, there's an easy solution to this:
When a user uses Google Maps check the country that the IP is registered in. It it's in China call the place a province of China, otherwise call it Taiwan.
Congrats, because of you later today in a meeting one of two things will happen.
1. A geek will pass out your post, crisis averted. Expect a job offer. But you have to work in China or something... check a previous post about where google newhires have to work. +)
2. a geek will say "In my research I have discovered that yadda yadda and problem solved, crisis averted".
and then 10 other geeks will roll their eyes because they read the same shit here too.
There's nothing Intelligent about Intelligent Design.
I read an article in Time about one of the top people in Google (was there back in '99) and it said that whenever she came across an issue similar to this she usually just referenced the CIA world fact book and went with whatever they had to avoid these kind of issues.
/ tw.html
Second country from the bottom, aftwer Zimbabwe and before European Union. http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos
So yes, they are in the CIA world factbook.
Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
This same sort of thing happened to Porsche when they listed "Palestine" on their world map instead of "Israel." Some jews in the states went ballistic on Porsche and got them change it.. I bet Germans not recognizing jewish states is probably how the taiwanese feel about being called china's bitch by google.
1. Politis and Geography
.....
It's very obvious that China will NEVER give up Taiwan, just like USA will NEVER give up Californina. Taiwan is just too important to China. Lost Taiwan, China has no way to control the west pacific. Once Taiwan become an "independent" country, it has to seek help from USA and evil Japan, and hence rely on them. Imagine USA and Japan can have military base on Taiwan Island. Hey, if you really like to see WWIII, please help Taiwan become independent.
2. History and Reality
It's very sad that memebers of a family have to be separated due to some political nonsense. Look at people living in Taiwan and Mainland China: they looks exactly the same; they speak exactly the same language; they have the same tradition
Actually, people from Taiwan usually get very well with people from Mainland, they are like brothers and sisters. They just don't like the government. In fact, lots of people from Mainland China don't like CCP government too. However, they have no choice now. The reality is Only CCP can help china keep steady and improve the life quality of Chinese people. Fortunately, CCP is reforming itself. We hope it can get better soon.
How about labelling it "Formosa"? Perfectly neutral, if slightly obsolete.
Why is it that every time this subject comes up (what to call Taiwan) the Chinese get hammered, and the Taiwanese get a pass?
Memo to Taiwan
If you don't like the current political climate, then settle the issue. I don't care HOW, just settle it. If you don't want to be part of China, then man up and say so. Fight if it comes to it. You'll know you'll lose though, which is why you don't try it.
The truth is, Taiwan has played the US as suckers in this. Sure, the US has a stake, but this is really a Taiwan vs. China issue, and should be dealt with as such.
And as an aside, it REALLY pisses me off that such an insignifcant blip is the focus of so much US military attention. Is Taiwan REALLY important enough to go to war with China over?
I thought that Taiwan is a chineese province, in fact the only one controlled by the legal government of the Republic of China as the mainland provinces are at the moment occupied by a communist regime.
"Taiwan Irked at Google's Version of Earth"
Actually this is quite interesting considering it is a known fact [past slashdot story here, too lazy to link] that Google is actively courting a business relationship with China and has already agreed to the censorship of their own search engine. Perhapse it smacks a bit of conspiracy theory (ok, no perhapse about it), but it's not exactly a huge stretch to believe that this may have been part of that business agreement. Google wants Chinese business, China demands a few small concessions, this being one of them. Honestly, what is Taiwan going to do about it? Whose economic impact is more important to google as a whole?
Yeah, I know it goes against everybody's sensibilities that Google is the self proclaimed 'good company' but I think the fact they caved to censorship in the first place already puts that particular bit in doubt.
On a side note, it's absolutely facinating what you CAN find using Google Earth. Scouring the naval shipyards in Yokosuka, Japan (old stomping grounds) found me a few cruisers and an aircraft carrier in port (35.17.28N by 139.39.46E for the curious). Also wonder if they have specific agreements to limit the resolution of any given area to comply with that nation's policy. I may not hold any love for the company, but it's a damn useful tool, I'll give em that.
You need a FREE iPod Nano
And ya know, that isn't rigorously true. Taiwan was filled with indigenous polynesians until the 1600s, was a Dutch colony for a while after that, was fairly uncontrolled between 1700 and 1800, was a Japanese colony from about 1800-1900, and was independent between 1900 and the start of WWII. Japan occupied it again during the war, and the Allies agreed China would occupy it *temporarily* after the war. Afterwards, of course, the Chinese civil war proceeded, the Kuomintang fled there, and the rest is history.
Why not call both China and Taiwan provinces of Japan? When anyone asks the engineers at Google that can just say "oops we were using old data from the WWII days" while they are being showered by Japanese gifts of schoolgirls and playstations and tentacle porn.
read the bunni comic
Write "China" with a black font and "Taiwan" with a red font. Providences are written in red, countries in black, but it doesn't seem to offend anybody.
...but I don't believe Google is going to back down. Their pledge of "Do No Evil" is coming hard up against realpolitik, and they're discovering that they're going to have to make compromises. They want that lucrative Chinese market. They've already started filtering their search engine, disallowing searchhes of words that the Chinese government finds objectionable. (Such as "Tiananmen Square." Nothing at ALL happened there, nope, nothing at all, citizen....)
Taiwan is an independant nation. It established itself in the chaos following the Communist Revolution and has stedfastly maintained independance. I do not believe that Google, however, will acknowledge that, since it's trying really hard to break into the Chinese market. It's really pretty sad and disgusting if you think about it, but I'm not going to be holding my breath. The days of Google being the scrappy and ethical underdog are passing by the wayside.
Of course I'll eat my words if I'm happily surprised and Google does "the right thing."
"I am an Adept of Tantric VAX."
When a request comes from a Mainland user create the map with Tiawan as part of China. When the request comes from Tiwawan, make it a seperate company. Otherwise use some nuetral name for the rest of us, that would satisfy the people who don't understand this conflict.
... mark Taiwan as a part of China anyway so that Google will be able to do business in both places. China has the authority and means of cutting off google.com to all its people. Taiwan cannot do the same because it's a "free country". Sure a percentage of people may boycott the site but that's a lot better than losing a potential 1.5 billion customers.
It may not be politically correct, but it's the best solution for the company I see.
Amtrak made the same mistake, but then corrected themselves, despite ISO 3166-1. After the matter was looked into, Amtrak sent an official letter of apology.
0 05/09/02/2003270053
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/taiwan/archives/2
Why can't Google?
Argument to antiquity is bullshit. The fact is that Taiwan is a democratic and independent country, as much as any may claim to be. Any attempt to validate China's claim is even more ethically corrupt than validating Hitler's claims to various bits of Europe (Austria, the Sudetenland, Alsace-Lorraine, Prussia, or whatever else lebensraum requires). Do NOT pretend that China is anything but an evil country with evil designs, lest ye be the Devil's apologist. We should have fought the annexation of Hong Kong as well--it would have been destroyed, but the point would be made. Legal principles and paper don't mean jack when moral principles are at stake, and don't you forget it.
From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taiwan
Currently there are 26 states -- mostly small, third-world nations in Africa and South America -- that have diplomatic relations with the Republic of China, although many countries such as the United States and United Kingdom have only de-facto embassies in Taiwan - the United States, for example, maintains diplomatic relations through the American Institute in Taiwan. ROC's de facto embassies are referred to as "Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Offices" (TECRO), with branch offices, the equivalent of consulates, called "Taipei Economic and Cultural Offices" (TECO). Each year, the government of the Republic of China petitions the UN for entry but has so far been unsuccessful because most countries, including the United States, view Taiwan as part of China. The ROC sometimes uses the name Chinese Taipei in the Olympics and other international events.
Deltron 3030 - Virus (music video)
Requests from WITHIN China say "Taiwan, Province of China". Requests from outside China say "Taiwan".
Other than the taiwaneese and the chineese, does anyone really give two shits what they call it?
I say Yawn becasue when I actually yawn, you don't pick up that I am bored talking to you.
Taiwan appears to be 'Taiwan' because it has its own government, but I could be misreading the situation.
I'm thinking this means my chances of getting Google to remove some false but ancient usenet posts containing my name are significatnly dimished. For some reason, I doubt my emails to Google are more effective than phone calls from foreign dignitaries. Then again, maybe Google is ignoring Taiwan because they're not nuclear capable. In that case, I'll just have my wife contact them... she certainly IS nuclear capable!
When Google is accessed from China, label it "A Province of China".
When Google accessed from Taiwan, label it "The Nation of Taiwan".
When accessed from anywhere else, label both China and Taiwan as "Butthead Totalitarian Regimes".
When I searched for Poland at the google maps, it found "Polish People's Republic", even though it's no longer "People's Republic" since 1989.
Who will make us less money, China or Taiwan? Whoever it is, piss them off. I'll bet a shiny nickel that says Google continues to diss Taiwan to cozy up to China.
I'm not a bloody American, so piss off.
The moderator here is very biased. He/she just favor Taiwan independence, so he/she gives high scores to every article which favor Taiwan Independence.
Morons, I hope you read some history before you bullshit on china affairs.
Every search i tried for a city in Tibet failed with "We could not understand the location", whereas searches for cities in China were accepted even though GM doesn't have map data for the area. Even "Lhasa, China" failed.
>>China has no way to control the west pacific..
Why should anyone want that? They have enough slaves and should leave the waters of the world to the rest of the planet's population.
If it were done when 'tis done, then t'were well it were done quickly... MacBeth
it will be interesting to see the brightest minds that money can buy
This is patently false, google does not contain the brightest minds that money can buy. An easy way to prove this is that google pays in the 50th percentile, meaning that half the tech firms out there pay better, which means that the brightest minds that money can buy would not be at google.
That is not to say that google does not have some very smart people, but don't kid yourselves, it's not a think tank over there.
Many people call China the next economic superpower. Guess what? It won't be, for several reasons:
1. Too many people is a bad thing. Sure they are consumers. They also need to be fed, and since China can't produce that much food, guess who they'll be importing it from? Also as industry develops, the gazillion people currently riding environment friendly bicycles will turn into polluters.
2. China has limited natural resources. Sure they have a few panda bears and a bit of oil. But once again, to support major economic growth, they'll be forced to *import* many goods.
3. China has a slightly... restrictive government. While they have been willing to make some changes to spur growth, they are not a free society by any means. This hurts many sectors of the economy either directly (such as tourism, e-commerce) or indirectly (talent pool of researchers, immigration, etc).
The U.S. has built economic dominance because it has a huge amount of natural resources and land mass combined with a modest population. We may complain about the government but in comparison to China, the level of interference with personal and business issues is low. That contributes to a successful economy.
China has a lot of budding little consumers but putting it as the next economic superpower is pretty far off-base.
You left out Cuba.
Instead of "how to balance the nationalistic pride of the inhabitants of Taiwan against the nationalistic pride of the inhabitants of mainland China" shouldn't we say "how to balance the nationalistic pride of the inhabitants of Taiwan against the imperialistic pride of the government of mainland China?"
The Taiwanese culture is quite different from the Mainland Chinese culture. The people of Taiwan deserve credit for their achievement. They should not have their freedom and self-determination taken away by a Chinese government that just wants to be bigger, when it does not manage perfectly what it has already.
If Taiwan gets seen as independant then they should also change the label of "puyallup Valley" to Fife washington. I'm sure if the hicks around here saw that they're raise hell!
It'd also be nice if the development i lived in *wasn't* a patch of dirt. =P
There was an old saying among Communists: "You can always count on a capitalist to sell you the rope that hangs him."
Actually only one Chinese dynasty ruled over Taiwan, the Qing. They took control from the Dutch and ceded it to Japan.
I do not think a single country officially recognizes Taiwan as independent.
Just provide a user check-box for whether you want Taiwan shown as part of China. Just like overlaying roads and restaurants, overlaying optional political boundaries seems pretty easy.
That's my bet. When it comes to money or doing what is right, google will now take the money. They will right Taiwan off if it's a choice and placate the PLA (the real rulers of mainland China) and their besuited front men goons.. Inevitable since they went public. Same as every other public corporation out there, profits always come first.
Am I the only white, anglosaxon male that is sick and tired of the US picking on China? So they're communists... big deal. So they've had some human rights abuse... please point to a country that has not? Slavery in the US anyone?
Let's look at the positives about China:
1. They have a long, documented history that dates back thousands of years.
2. Much of the technology that the world enjoys today came from China. Gun powder, fireworks, silk, etc.
3. They are an extremely civilized people. They have no fanatic religious nuts tyring to nuke the world... this alone should make the US love China.
4. And finally, if it weren't for China, Walmart and much of the US economy wouldn't exist.
Think about it.
If a person surfs to Google from Taiwan, call it Taiwan, ROC. If a person surfs to Google from China, call it Taiwan, Province of PRC. If a person surfs from anywhere else, label it "Here be dragons."
Interesting, because I just reported this for Ubuntu as it was also displaying "Taiwan, Province of China":
http://bugzilla.ubuntu.com/show_bug.cgi?id=16314
methink there is a definite concerted effort out there from mainland Chinese to do this. It is also quite easy to do with OpenSource and it's wilfully politically ignorant geeks...
Maybe they already figured out which side their bread was buttered on. After all, they are pretty sharp. They don't have to solve anything. They made the smart move in trying to get cozy with the next economic superpower. Now they can just ignore the complaining until it goes away.
"Don't be Evil" used to be Google's motto.
If they don't solve this by reflecting on "good", such as calling Tibet, "Tibet", then they are at least as evil as the Chinese ..
echo '[q]sa[ln0=aln80~Psnlbx]16isb572CCB9AE9DB03273snlbxq' |dc
Google's spineless behavior here illustrates Lenin's dictum that capitalism was so foolish, it'd sell the Soviet Union the rope (technology) by which it would be hung. Fortunately, the U.S. Congress, showing better sense than many CEOs, banned those sorts of sales during the Cold War. Perhaps we need laws that would require our high tech companies to be less compliant with the repressive Chinese government and less willing to assist in censoring the Internet. Let French and German companies do the censoring. Their countries have a long history of doing that sort of thing.
This fuss also illustrates the hypocriticy of the semi-libertarian, semi-liberal politics of much of the high tech community. They're all for freedom when it's something they want to do (i.e. view porn), but they're often indifferent when the suffering isn't their own. You saw that in Apple's "Think Different" campaign, which included the Tibetian Deli Lama, perhaps a personal favorite of Steve Jobs. When they had that campaign in China-controlled Hong Kong, his picture mysteriously disappeared. Tibet is, after all, brutally occupied by China. Think Different apparently only applies where there's no cost involved, personal or financial. Call it. "Be Different Only When Cool and Convenient."
--Mike Perry, Untangling Tolkien
P.S. And yes, I know that many in western Canada would be happier to be part of the U.S. rather than joined to the corrupt and meddlesome Toronto government. At present, they're more like colonies than states.
Obvious nonsense, your post is rather, I say. Only a handful of countries recognize Taiwan as an independent country. Taiwan isn't a member of the UN. It's not recognized as a soveriegn nation by the US, Googles base of operation. It seems that folks expect Google to make a political statement that the US government itself isn't willing to make, nor most other countries on the planet. That seems a bit much to ask. I presume that the "Province of China" moniker is included to differentiate the political entity from the island of Taiwan. The political entity includes a number of smaller islands in addition to the main island of Taiwan.
Stephanie says / she wants to know / why she's given half her life to / people she hates now.
While China claims that Taiwan is a province it still treats their citizens as foreigners. If they really believed their claim they would treat the citizens of Taiwan the same as other Chinese citizens. This would include the granting of passports, entering the country and working without a visa, etc. My wife has both US and Taiwan passports but we still needed a Chinese visa to visit relatives in Shanghia. Unlike direct transport links which require both China and Taiwan to approve, China could treat Taiwanese as Chinese without the cooperation of the Taiwan government.
By that reasoning Iraq is no longer a nation, but is a territory of the USA.
The elections were a farce and a failure, and are not recognised by the 2nd largest ethnic/population group, and there is no "exit date" for the occupying invaders.
So, like Tibet is a part of China, Iraq is a part of the USA.
Note, I am not saying what is right or wrong here,just following the logic you have expressed.
Maurice W. Hilarius Voice: (778) 347-9907
Taiwan Offended by Google's Vision of Earth
Just tell Taiwan that the images are three years old and nobody was as certain as to their sovereignty then. That will buy Google a few years time to come up with a good answer!
What the hell is with all these hardcore conservative nerds these days? It's like some kind of self-parody.
A Taiwanese 2600 Magazine reader wrote a letter to the editors making this very same complaint and threatening to stop reading, etc., until 2600 made a formal apology. 2600 said pretty much, slow down there, pal. There are ISO standards for what countries are called, how their names are transliterated, etc. These standards are maintained by the UN. If you have a complaint, take it there. We're following ISO standards. I imagine for Google, following ISO standards would be a legitimate concern.
The important thing to realise is that the media does not just adapt to the requirements of foreign governments, but also to those of your own government and particularly big business. You should never solely rely on domestic media for your information as it's really full of distortions and deliberate omissions. You need to take an average, and unfortunately this can be time consuming.
Actually supporters of the Ming dynasty (after it fell to Qing) took Taiwan from the Dutch. Those supporters dreamed of using Taiwan as a base to one day defeat the Qing and restore the Ming dynasty, but eventually the Qing defeated them and got control over Taiwan.
Prior to the Dutch control, settlers from China has crossed over to Taiwan too, as early as the "Three Kingdoms Period" if I recall correctly. The Taiwanese aboriginies used to be called the "mountain folks" a few decades ago, because Chinese settlers has long took over the plains, which I guess (ie I don't have any source to back me up) was way before when the Dutch came.
Anyways your point is taken. Only one dynasty has had direct rule over Taiwan. Thanks for the correction (-:
Warning: Sig Fault. Dumping warp core.
Isn't it that people have right not to be mistaken as communist?
Taiwan is mistakenly labeled as part of some communist country.
This is ridiculous because it's definitely not communist and has
progressed toward a democratic government in last century.
write not right, sheesh...
zogger
A question to anyone that might know. How does someone born in Taiwan travel outside the "country"? If other countries won't officially recognize Taiwan (or ROC) as an actual country, how is a passport issued by ROC valid? Do people from Taiwan have to also obtain a passport from the PRC?
AccountKiller
I wonder if Slashdot is on the outside of the great firewall... Talk of Taiwan can't be appreciated by those that rule China...
1. 2.
And searching for Stockholm (the capital of Sweden, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stockholm) in Earth shows you Uppsala (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uppsala) instead.
I might be offended by that, but I prefer the comforting feeling that even google gets it wrong sometimes.
(This was the last time I checked, so it might be fixed, or get fixed when it's out of beta.)
FOR THOSE MORRONS AND REDNECKS, Taiwan is one of the provinces of China. If you start talking about democratic bush@#it, look back to your own retarded president, could you please pretend a little bit smarter than that liar!
Or more like the plug on Google. When for-profit corporations start meddling in international or ANY kind of politics - snip, cut 'em off right there and now. Don't even wait 5 minutes.
Most of China probably isn't allowed to even view a google.com site... so let the Taiwanese get their way! :)
"In PROC the view is that historically Taiwan was part of the PROC, so it should be reunited with the motherland...."
This is simply not true. Taiwan was part of Ching Dynasty, and then later part of Japan for 50 years. After WWII, Japan give up the authoritarian to Taiwan, ROC take over Taiwan... However, TAIWAN WAS NEVER PART OF PRC.
I declare my 1 acre property the Kingdom of FOO and I want Google Maps to label me as such!
I agree with the if(ip==Taiwan) comment. It's their own damn fault if they use a proxy location in China like the rest of us!
There's the important qualifier that the US isn't claiming it.
Otherwise you could make a case that large portions of Japan and the NATO countries are part of the US as well.
In other news, Quebec wants Google Earth to stop calling it a province of Canada :D
my blog
I think as of 1998 or so the government of Taiwan no longer considers itself the rightful ruler of the mainland. If I remember correctly there was even some rectification of the legislature to reflect the situation on the ground.
yours,
kbs
Everyone in both Taiwan and China knows that the two regions need to work together and have increased contacts and less hostility. How deep an integration it shall be, and under which label, is however disputed. They may long term end up in a construction similar to the one with Hongkong under "one country" or perhaps in "two countries" which share legislation, taxation or currency.
There is no logical answer to the question whether it shall be one or two "countries", but there are emotional answers, and unfortunately there the opinions are very diverging.
So unfortunately that doesn't work...
yours,
kbs
EBay? My god, people. What an irrational way to resolve such an important issue.
... uh, looking absolutely identical in size and appearance:
Clearly, we need a good, old-fashioned Google fight...
====
In this corner... measuring in at almost 300km long:
Republic of Taiwan
And in the other corner
Taiwan Province
Okay, let's have a clean fight.
DING! DING!
And they're coming out swinging. Oh, there a hard left from the People's Republic, and a hard right from the (non-People's) Republic. And another left, and another right, and... boy they don't really mix it up much, do they? And, OH, there's a really solid hit. And one of the Taiwans is metaphorically down for the count. He's out! And the winner is....
Republic of Taiwan: 96 600 000 hits
Taiwan Province: 26 500 000 hits
This match is over, baby!!
====
In conclusion, clearly, by Google's own standards, they do need to change the name.
Well, you're right; the "historically" is somewhat of a misnomer because it's been a staging grounds for failed dynastic returns etc... and it's only current issues which have made the people on the mainland so attached.
:P ...after the Polynesians got there, the Japanese attempted a settlement, and failed. The Chinese also attempted and failed. Then it was a Dutch colony was for perhaps less than 50 years in the early 1600s, but by that point there were already ethnic Chinese on the island, which the Dutch encouraged to intermarry with the Polynesians and Dutch in order to foster racial stability. It was nominally part of China, and signed over to the Japanese at the end of the Sino-Japanese War in 1895. The Taiwanese weren't happy about this, so they declared independence, only to be run over by a significantly superior army three days later. Thus it was a Japanese colony from 1895-1945. The documents left rather vague about how Taiwan was to be handled, and this was done on purpose by the Americans in order to allow the KMT a place to run when the Chinese civil war (which had been halted for WWII) wound down and they lost.
But if we're talking rigor
Now, culturally speaking, Taiwan and China can be considered sufficiently different. What's interesting is that the whole idea of a unified China (the whole dynastic ideal anyway) has always been one ethnic group oppressing everyone else, whether it be the group from around Manchuria, or Mongolia, etc. There is no such thing as a unified Chinese culture... but I digress.
yours,
kbs
As Google is a US Corporation it should use the policy that US has for naming. A corporation of a country should not have its own foreign policy.
Which is why it's delicate and potentially graceful.
Mainland is actively, albeit carefully and incrementally, moving
towards greater democracy, economic liberalization, and even
greater degrees of province self-management (the last of which
there is some already but not obviously of a desirable sort).
Probably the best outcome is that we all just dance around this
issue for a few more years and it dissolves, either because
"sentiment on the street" changes on one side or the other
(less likely) or because there's a clear win-win reconciliation
that probably includes *some* form of peaceful reunification.
Meanwhile, companies like Google (as noted in several posts already)
ought to mind their own business by picking a least-controversial
political authority and following that standard. That may be
emotionally rough on some Taiwanese but it's not as though Google
doing something different would really advance their cause.
-t
If the US gained independence when it wanted to, i.e. the DoI, then doesn't that mean Taiwan does when it wants to as well? It's leaders seem to agree, like our founders, that it is seperate from the mainland.
Now I would guess it is part on mainland China. It seems more like a state then a seperate country.
Why don't you guys have friends or journals?
That means not toadying up to massive governments because Google wants contracts with the entity that claim the right to all lands that at one time were held by China in the last several thousand years.
C'mon google. Obey your own dictates. Grow a pair. The 40 - 60 million people murdered in the "Cultural Revolution" cry out for justice.
Let's do a simple test for jurisdiction:
1. Do representatives from Taiwan go to Bejing to represent them?
2. Do the people of Taiwan answer to the Warlord^h^h^h^h^h^h^duly constituted Chinese Govt?
3. Do the people of Taiwan pay taxes to the Chinese Central Authority?
4. Does China provide for the roads, postal service etc of Taiwan?
5. Does the Chinese Army protect and/or inhabit Taiwanese territory?
6. Are Chinese laws enforced in Taiwan?
7. Did many Chinese flee the mainland midcentury to avoid opression, slaughter and imprisonment by Mao et al?
The answer to the first six questions are an unequivacal 'No!'
The answer to the last one is an uniquivocal "Yes!"
I think by any possible test the Taiwanese people and Government are completely independent of China and are more concerned with invasion by China than any other issue.
Google needs to wake up. If they don't get a clue, perhaps we should invent a distributed indexing engine and drop them out of the picture. Why? Because you and I can be sold out in the exact same way.
China has not "owned" Tibet any time in the last 1500 years except for the last 50, and has had absolutely no control that was granted by the people of Tibet. That makes China an occupying, illegitimate, oppressive power in Tibet.
How do we determine when secession is permissible and when it is not? The Basque region in Spain, late 1700s US, Ireland, Hawaii since its statehood, the US South during the Civil War, the Caucasus, Tibet, Taiwan, Israel/Palestine for the last 2000 years, the Sunni triangle, Brazil, Luisitania, so many examples throughout history...
Is there really one simple test to cover all these situations? Everyone's flat declarations really seem to imply there's a some simple approach, but I'm not seeing it.
My first instinct is: secession should be allowed by popular sovereignty - if the locals want independence, they should get it. But does that mean the American South deserved to get its independence, even if it meant the continuation of slavery? So perhaps popular sovereignty is forfeited by a disregard for human rights. But what about in places where the population distribution for and against secession poses a logistical nightmare? Or what if, as in India/Pakistan a few decades back, it would just create two hostile states, tossing out the forced compromises of government for the aggressive posturing preferred by rival states? What if, like in the Basque region, allowing secession might leave the region economically destitute... even to the point it appears genocidal? Can logistical difficulties or paternalism justify a refusal of secession? I don't know, it seems like the answer is "sometimes." Many seem to rely upon historical ownership, but that rarely seems helpful. If a country is unjustly governing a territory, it shouldn't be mitigated because they've unjustly held it for a long time. And if a territory needs another country's rule of law, it shouldn't matter how recent it has begun to benefit. And if it is relevant, how long is long enough? 50 years? 100 years? 1000 years? And how many people does it take to secede? Do you have to have a simple majority, 2/3rds? Can my neighborhood secede?
I'm not saying anyone is wrong, I just don't know why this issue is so easy for everyone else, when the basic principles seem so elusive to me.
After we figure out when secession is justified, we can apply that answer to our maps and blindly ignore political blackmail by groups that are displeased. But it doesn't seem like anyone has done a thorough analysis of the political ethics of secession relevant to the contemporary geopolitical atmosphere, on slashdot or elsewhere.
and the north was right both times, yes? British have no ruling power here and neither do southern slaveowners.
Taiwan used to have a seat. In fact, it's the seat that mainland China now holds. When the US and the UN officially recognized mainland China, they conceeded that Taiwan were a province thereof, and thus it lost all diplomatic status in the UN.
In the US, it's kind of a little weird. We're forbidden from recognizing Taiwan as an independent country, but yet we de facto defend them.
The whole Taiwan/China thing is a mess, and making any sense out of the political mess is impossible, because it's so full of paradoxes and logical inconsistencies that you can't properly make sense of it.
I am unamerican, and proud of it!
There is supposed to be some sort of filter to block out ////happyhappyhappy//// content and ////happyhappyhappy//// objectional material. ////happyhappyhappy//// is alive and well here is communist China!
Humor from a Genetically Molested Mind
Well it doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure this one out...
:)
If the client browser IP makes it look like the visitor is from China mark Taiwan as being a province of China.
If not mark it as a sovereign state.
If you can't get the browser IP ask the user which desccription they'd prefer and set a cookie
There. Everyone's happy.
Aboriginal saying (paraphrased 'cause I'm too lazy to find the proper text): "Men arguing about who owns territory on the earth are like fleas arguing about who owns the dog they're standing on."
Sky subscribers are morons. They pay to be advertised at !
A province of the Empire of China
I'm still trying to figure out what people mean by 'social skills' here.
In classical ethics, there are a few actions that are intrinsically evil, among them, lying. The trouble with lying is that it consists not only of the selection of some arbitrary symbols, but a selection which intentionally misleads the person begin lied to. There seems always to have been a distinction between the explicit lie and the tacit one: early Roman Christians were content not to disabuse their fellow citizens of the Christians' (non-)pagan status unless specifically challenged. Otherwise, the Roman eradication would have been rather more complete.
With a published work such as Google, the issue is complicated by the many audiences. Who is Google's audience? Me? I don't feel lied to when I see "province of China" plastered over Taiwan, because I am aware of the situation and expect to be notified of a regime change by CNN, not Google.
What about the larger U.S. public? Due to our pathetic world geography education, those folks may be deceived. But the degree of deception is tempered by the overwhelming apathy of that audience.
Most of the rest of the Google audience is better educated, and not deceived. Certainly the Taiwanese are not deceived. I've been assured that the mainland Chinese are also aware of their government's pervasive influence on the media -- though not all, evidently: see the dogmatic statements on Korea earlier in this discussion.
That last minority is a troubling one: those who want to believe the lie (N.B.: I am not disputing the claims concerning Korean history above; it's just that I have no means to judge the source's credibility). Another example: those religious fanatics who insist that sexual preference is always a matter of choice. But one may defend the "misleading" publication that lends them support by casting the responsibility back on them: they could find the truth if they wanted to find it. Thus the misrepresentation is found in the intent of the reader, not the publisher.
Google is making a judgement that the good they bring overwhelms the transparent deceptions in which they must participate to bring it. Perhaps they're wrong. Those without sin will certainly continue to cast stones.
Basically, you have to register a cookie with the client which encodes his political view on the matter. Then generate the view accordingly. If he's a Taiwanese patriot, label the region one way; if he's a People's Republican, label it the other way.
:)
That's how you cater to insanity, basically: you allow everyone to live in his little world of personalized preferences.
MacArthur wanted to nuke that whole half of the continent 50+ years ago.
Now the neocons want to (and probably will get to) do it.
Who would've guessed that Google, of all 'evil empires', would be the one to actually start the war. =/
What a wonderfullllllll worrrrrrrrrrld!!
"was a Japanese colony from about 1800-1900, "
At 1800 Japanese did not even dare to declare war with China.
"Japan occupied it again during the war, and the Allies agreed China would occupy it *temporarily* after the war."
Please give a reference where this "temporarily" comes from.
Why do you keep posting a lotta historical facts with so many mistakes?
There is no international institution that recognizes Taiwan as an independent country.
Case closed.
IANAL but write like a drunk one.
I dont feel offended by the misspelled German name "Hainau" instead of "Chojnów", that's just another (though obsolete now) name of that city.
;-)
I feel offended by the name "People's Republic of Poland", as e.g. any Frenchman would be offended if France had been called "Vichy" by Google, or any Czech if instead of the Czech Republic Google Maps/Earth would have their country listed as "Reichsprotektorat Böhmen und Mähren".
The UN doesn't consider Taiwan a country because they're not a member. Why arn't they members? Because new membership in the UN requires the assent of the Security Council, and Taiwan (as well as everyone else) knows the PRC would veto their joining faster than you can say "Formosa."
That's why - not because the US doesn't think so.
Cue The Sun...
If the school bully says you have to say "uncle", that doesn't mean he's suddenly your real uncle...
No. But the school bully could be fucking your sister, and beating you up because she wont let him go anal.
Taiwan, whom until recently were known as the province of China...
It's true no man is an island, but if you take a bunch of dead guys and tie 'em together, they make a good raft.
it will be interesting to see the brightest minds that money can buy trying to solve what decades of diplomats have unsuccessfully wrestled with
/* Tell them what they want to hear */
if (country_code(referrer_IP())) eq "cn") {
country_label = "Taiwan, a Province of China";
} else {
country_label = "Taiwan, an independent country";
}
here's two of the blogs that started this whole movement. whether you agree or not, there's some infomation that's invaluable for both sides.... warning... it's definitely a pro-independent blog; however, the owner is quite tolerant to those who have different opinion. blog.yam.com/subing blog.yam.com/lifeshot i think most points have been covered. i definitely dont agree with the lable. i like the fact that once again it has generated an international discussion. more people understand the issues, the better....
Taiwan is exactly a part of Republic of China, by Taiwan's constitution. The others are
...except where business interests take precedence.
One software evil empire will replace another.
As a Taiwanese, let me just go ahead and tell Slashdot, what most of us already know; most of the people on Slashdot can't find Taiwan on a map, and their geography skills are about as clear as their Sendmail conf files.
I am currently in Taiwan, and as an American, I can tell you, Taiwan and China, have very little to do with each other. It's like comparing a New Yorker vs someone from San Diego just because both are considered American.
Taiwan = ROC = REPUBLIC of China (Or if you buy the current President's spewl, ROT, Republic of Taiwan.
China = PRC = PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC of China.
So what's the difference?
Let me make the difference short and sweet:
If you "protest" in the ROC, The news camera comes and asks you for your opinion and why you are protesting.
If you "protest" in the PRC, the government sends a tank to run you over while the news cameras film it.
So if you can tell the difference, just remember, one you get tank tracks on your chest for protesting, and you have no freedom.
Any other questions?
What google should do is link what Taiwan is called (Province of China v. Republic of Taiwan) to what the first search result is when someone searches for Taiwan. Let the countries war by increasing Google's add revenue.
The business grows itself.
"Google's mission statement is Do No Evil. The inclusion of Taiwan with an aggressive power such as China is not exactly good. They should acknowledge the defacto freedoms the Taiwanese currently possess."
The mission statement is not "do good," nor is it "fight evil." It is, as you said, "do no evil."
All that that statement implies is that the company should not personally do evil. Regardless of whether we, as individual people or companies avoid creating it, evil exists, and there will always be others willing or misguided enough to make it. Being good means doing good. It means fighting evil when we can and how we can.
Neville Chamberlin was not a bad man. Nevertheless, he tried to appease evil when he saw it. What good did that do?(Does it count as a Godwin violation if I compare someone to Chamberlin? This isn't to compare China to Nazi Germany, nor to suggest that Google ought to declare war on China... Chamberlin was merely the first appeaser who came to mind.)
*honken*
This is my sig. It's prescription, I swear. I need it for reading things... on the other side of things
If your aunt is fucking the school bully... you might be a redneck.
fish and pipes
What China has done with Taiwan is rather crappy.
Please check your facts before posting. You are obviously from the Mainland. As an European having lived in both, China and Taiwan, I can tell you following:
0. Your history books are plain wrong, I could amuse myself for hours with the crap you people get educated at school. You don't get the pre world war 2 history right, you don't get the world war 2 right you even do not get the post ww2 history right.
Please read george orwell's 1984, that's exactly what is going on in your country. The official history has been changed in the past 50 years several times to match the current party policies.
1. Politics and Geography
China has currently no control over Taiwan, nor did it ever have in the past 50 years, or so (who counts). oh, guess what, you did not have control over Taiwan before that either - because it was occupied by the Japanese for something like 60 years and there was NO Peoples Republic of China. That's right... *gasp*. Your country has not existed before 1949. It was Republic of China. The Maoist cavemen were hidding in the forrest while the KMT was fighting the Japanese.
Until something like 1912 China was a Kingdom under the Qing Dynasty, and guess what, they did not belong to the Communist Party either and they had maybe 200 years control over Taiwan and it is disputed if they had control over the whole Island. You can't claim ownership of Land, because you had it for few years... That's like the Dutch coming up now and claiming Taiwan belongs to the Netherlands because they had colonized it first.
California does belong to the USA, and they have no problem with that. Taiwan is not California. It is a seperated and independent "Area", isolated from the Mainland. It developed independently from the PRC and nobody on the whole fucking island want's to be a Province of China. There are many people who are playing with the idea of joining the PRC in a SAR like format, but seeing how miserabely HongKong is doing currently, that won't happen anytime soon, and they are in the minority.
2. History and Reality
Nobody is seperated. It was the Maoist rebels who were trying to kill them, so they had to escape to the island. Nobody of age 40 I spoke to want's to even consider becoming part of the PRC. They see them selfes as Taiwanese.
Also, funny you talk about traditions. Having lived in China for two years, I did not see any. Why is that? Because you fucking destroyed most of it during the Culture Revolution, you killed everybody who was not a peasant. Wearing glasses was evidence enough for getting fucked up really bad. You burned most of your Temples and most of your historic books, most of your historic buildings, you tore down every tradition that was there. Do not talk to anbody about traditions, you do not have any. You are drones of the Party.
Finally, 90% of the people in China are not like you. They starve, they live in primitive huts and build houses for you to live in. They work 20 hours a day so you can go on the internet and troll around about how great your country is. get out of Shanghai/Beijing and drive out 50kms, you will be surprised to end up in the 3rd world china is. in the slum and dirt and people with no future running around the streets like zombies. Those are the peasants who were fighting and working for you all the years, so you can screw them over in the end.
Sommary: DO NOT spread your views to Foreigners, because your views suck and are based on hot air.
Taiwan gets no respect. It is a democracy, yet people offend it to avoid offending it's autocratic big brother, China. Why are we defending a non-democracy at the expense of a democracy?
Table-ized A.I.
You will be surprised to find out that Taiwan actually did have one until 1971. It was the UN who wetted their pants after China demanded to have Taiwans seat transferred to china. Cold war at it's best.
Formosa
Sure to piss off just about everybody.
Apparently, both "Union of Soviet Socialist Republics" and "Soviet Union" are in Google's database, "America" points to the United States (not labeled with its official name, or any name for that matter), "Korea" shows South Korea (the Republic of Korea), yet "Northern Ireland", "Republic of China", "Kuril Islands", "West Bank", and "Tibet" give nothing...
Denham's Dentrifice, Denham's Dentrifice, Denham's Dandy Dental Dentrifice, Denham's Dentrifice Dentrifice Dentrifice.
Why is this even an issue?
With China's abominable human rights record and blatant disregard for it's own (UN-approved) constitution, I'm amazed that companies with any ethics whatsoever are even contemplating doing business with scum like that.
You may as well start selling chemicals for Gas Chambers at Auswhitz. Oh wait...
Just because these jokers have money are we just going to roll over and acquiesce to their own view of the world?
"Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
Very good point. I've made other posts elsewhere in the thread that said almost as much, but they didn't get moderated as highly... :)
Say hello to my little sig.
You see wokick,
... but that's a different story you may want to research on while doing some holidays in the West....
I, being my self European, had the pleasure to live in taiwan and now live in china. And I can tell you, only PRC Chinese make an issue out of it. Why? Why do you point missiles at your "brothers and sisters", why do you threaten to kill everyone on the island if they declare independence?
Face it, nobody in the world would want to become a part of the current mainland-China. Nobody. It's not because you are Chinese or because you look different or speak different languages.
It is because of your government which is known for abuse of basic human rights, for imprisonment of any individual who is against the current system. Your government is a corrupt establishment with no ethics. We know that. You don't. Because nobody tells you anything bad about your current government. All websites on the internet, that do report about the abuses done by your government are blocked by your government, simple example being that of BBC News website, which is not accessible from your country.
Finally, do not make a Political issue out of your friendship or assume that all Taiwanese would like to kiss Mao's ass. They don't. Those who are there, do it because they can get rich quickly in china and fuck around with cheap whores.
That's why white people are in China, like my self, too. We do it because we can get rich quickly and fuck cheap whores at the same time, a different one every week. I am not here because I love Mao, who by the way was a pedophile mass-murderer
> Every other country recognizes the One China as the Red China. Sure, that may be true of countries, but individuals do not have to. I, for one, do not recognize any country that pisses on human rights, so I view the "People's Republic of China" as illegitimate, as well as North Korea, Vietnam, Myanmar, Cuba, Venezuela, etc. If a country does not give its citizens lawful control of their own lives, then in my mind's eye, it's not a country at all.
I see the debate about the geopolitical status of Taiwan is alive and well-- the Taiwanese know who they are, and that's what counts-- whether someone else, be it Google, Microsoft, Yahoo, or whomever, refers to them as "subservients" to another nation (Communist China), is irrelevant-- people who live in Taiwan ARE CHINESE, and FREE-- and that CANNOT be disputed!