Jailed Chinese Reporter Joins Yahoo! Suit
taoman1 writes "The Associated Press reports that Shi Tao, who was sentenced in 2005 to 10 years in prison, is now seeking compensation from Yahoo. He claims the Hong Kong and Chinese branches of the company provided information to the Chinese authorities that led to his arrest. 'Shi, a former writer for the financial publication Contemporary Business News, was jailed for allegedly providing state secrets to foreigners. His conviction stemmed from an e-mail he sent containing his notes on a government circular that spelled out restrictions on the media. Yahoo has acknowledged turning over data on Shi at the request of the Chinese government, saying company employees face civil and criminal sanctions if they ignore local laws. It denies Yahoo Hong Kong was involved.'"
... that China is right in their efforts to censor the Internet or stifle free speech, but did Yahoo! actually do anything legally wrong?
Treason is aiding or abetting an enemy of the country. I don't see how handing over records that prove one's culpability to China amounts to this...unless you're REALLY scared fo the Yellow Menace.
I never spellcheck and I freely admit it. Save your karma for more worthwhile "lol erorrs" replies
I see posts asking if it is legal or not but does this matter? If country A passes a law that by moral standards is so disgusting can't people be held accountable if they still obey the law? If the law saws genocide against a people is legal and people do it, shouldn't those people still be held accountable? So if what happened in China is legal but makes the free world barf in disgust shouldn't the human morale side overrule the legal one?
Just some food for thought to hurt our brains on a Monday.
Using openSUSE instead of Windows since 9th of October, 2007 and liking it.
Using openSUSE instead of Windows since 9th of October, 2007 and liking it.
They came from my previous post and apparently you can't read. Anyway.
Morals are not black and white nor can they be agreed upon by all, laws exist to set a line in the sand. You wish to set a line in the sand based on the morals of the people and so I mentioned cases where other countries go against US morals or vice-versa.
So what if a Canadian company was asked to provide emails for a police investigation into a serial murdered in a state with the death penalty?
Since to many Canadians the death penalty is immoral I take it would the company be justified in refusing? If the US had laws that force US companies to act such a way in China would it not be hypocritical to not let the Canadian company do likewise?
I do so love the assumptions people make when I talk from a rational and logical point of view (to me at least), apparently we're all expected to blind never changing zealots that keep to some invisible personal party line.
Or we could accept that some things are morally repugnant and do everything in our power to stop those we can. Also, what happens to the people who are working for Yahoo!China? Do they lose their jobs just so Yahoo! can be morally upright? People always say how another search company will rise to replace Yahoo if it leaves, so these people aren't out of jobs, they'll just be hired by those we can't deter from operating in China.
Using openSUSE instead of Windows since 9th of October, 2007 and liking it.
Using openSUSE instead of Windows since 9th of October, 2007 and liking it.
Yahoo has often recited the standard 'must comply with local laws' line, but have they ever identified which Chinese law(s), specifically, forced their hand? They were even asked point-blank, and remained conveniently silent.
Shi Tao's lawyer says there was "no obligation at all to follow mainland China's law" (from the article linked above).
Is there in fact any substance to Yahoo's position, or is it just a hollow public relations exercise? If there's truth to what Yahoo says, they could be a bit more open about this.
Okay, so this guy is suing Yahoo because he's under fire for breaking "laws" in his own country. Look here, if I'm committing a "crime", say uh, smoking dope in my Canadian backyard and some NDP neighbor calls the pigs, well my neighbor is an asshole but I was still technically breaking the local law. I can harbor seething distaste for my politically-inferior cohabitant, but I have no legal ground to sue him.
Do we agree with China's corrupt censorship ? No. Does that mean it's ok for us to ignore their government's laws and impose our liberal views on THEIR citizens ? No. This guy got what was coming to him. If he doesn't want to be punished for speaking his mind, he should move to a free country.
-Billco, Fnarg.com
Welcome to the reality. Our laws don't apply past our borders. So sorry. While it is morally wrong to do this, it's also perfectly legal in China. A similar example would be in the U.S. - there are laws for indecency and pandering and such(as well as certain drugs) that just don't apply in Amsterdam. You can get arrested and thrown in jail in the U.S. for what over there is considered not to really be an issue, legally.