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Google.cn Has Already Lifted Censorship

An anonymous reader writes "In an update to Google's withdrawal from China, there are reports that censorship has already been lifted. It's probably taken a while to report because of Google's ranking system." Just a warning that the language on that blog post is NSFW but it does provide evidence.

52 of 300 comments (clear)

  1. I only hope by Vinegar+Joe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Google's expat employees are now out of China.

    --
    "The average reporter we talk to is 27 years old......They literally know nothing." - Ben Rhodes
    1. Re:I only hope by rvw · · Score: 3, Funny

      Google's expat employees are now out of China.

      Yeah I think the Chinese government will now cease all property that belongs to Google, send all employees to work camps, and then will start a full scale war on the US. I mean, what do they have to loose? When Google is gone, China will collapse anyway, so they might as well go with a good blast.

    2. Re:I only hope by Vinegar+Joe · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yeah I think the Chinese government will now cease all property that belongs to Google, send all employees to work camps......

      You mean like Stern Hu, the Australian executive for Rio Tinto, who has been held by the Chinese since July 5, 2009?

      http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601081&sid=aq9DMlCuW45M

      --
      "The average reporter we talk to is 27 years old......They literally know nothing." - Ben Rhodes
    3. Re:I only hope by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 4, Funny

      Aw man... why did you have to go ruining the guy's witty sarcasm with that reality shit?

      --
      I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
    4. Re:I only hope by Hognoxious · · Score: 5, Funny

      I think the Chinese government will now cease all property that belongs to Google

      Will they need a seize and desist order?

      what do they have to loose?

      Nothing, it's clearly a tight situation.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    5. Re:I only hope by ShatteredArm · · Score: 3, Insightful
      No?

      Indeed, the Open Up the West campaign has intensified the long-term exploitation of the West as primary resource supplier for eastern development and increased the wealth disparity between the western regions and the eastern regions in China. For example, although the Chinese government has invested over 45 billion yuan on West-East Electricity Transfer Project (WEETP), most of the power generated is transmitted to the eastern regions instead invested in local development. It is fair to say that China’s campaign to “Open up the West” was mainly motivated by the eastern regions’ need for natural resources instead of the alleged goal of decreasing wealth disparity between the two regions.

    6. Re:I only hope by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It surprises me how fast they have regrown an educated class after killing so many back in the 50's.
      And now PHD's are going back to China. I guess they don't think it will happen again.

      There is a lot of racial patriotism in china. One of the best things that could happen there is a lot of immigrants and intermarriage to break up that meme- I think it's potentially dangerous the way aryanism was.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    7. Re:I only hope by trenton · · Score: 4, Informative
      From the TFA:

      Jiang Yu, a spokeswoman at China's Foreign Ministry, said ... "The case will be handled in a just and lawful manner." Jiang didn't answer a question on when there will be a trial.

      Gimmie more of that Chinese justice!

      --
      Too big to fail? Does that make me to small to succeed?
  2. I Don't Think Censorship's Been Lifted by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's probably taken a while to report because of Google's ranking system.

    I don't understand how this explains it. The searches shown have very low results for the offensive images? I don't think Google would be foolish enough to remove values from their page ranking system or fiddle with those numbers. Rather it would seem much more intuitive to build an interface that filters designated problem links and images. It's probably even automated for some bullshit arm of the Chinese government (who the devil is it these days? The Ministry of Culture?) that can go into a web portal and just add images and domains and pages to a list of restrictions. Maybe even the government is savvy enough to have an feed or service that gives this information out to companies to assure compliance and ease of compliance? A simpler answer is that a few new sites popped up and the government just hasn't added them to the no-no list yet. If you look at the URLs in the images, they are from blogspot.com which means they're probably new blogs that need to be individually blocked by the Chinese government and/or Google. What you're probably seeing is lazy censorship or the latency of an adequate solution for censorship -- which is pretty much as defective by design as it gets. I don't think "lifts" censorship is what's going on here or else Google would be looking at losing business to one sixths of the world's population. While Google professes 'do no evil' they still have shareholders to satisfy.

    --
    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:I Don't Think Censorship's Been Lifted by TheKidWho · · Score: 2, Funny

      What /. needs to do is start censoring big walls of text.

    2. Re:I Don't Think Censorship's Been Lifted by medlefsen · · Score: 2, Insightful
    3. Re:I Don't Think Censorship's Been Lifted by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Who knows what the algorithm is but part of it is probably cross-links in the local language. Then probably pages that are searched for a lot by different users. This would also be low in China currently.

      One of my girlfriends worked with a chinese lady who swore up and down that TS never happened. Even when confronted with web evidence and after living in the US for several years. So there is a fair amount of brainwashing going on at an early age.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  3. FTFA by gyepi · · Score: 2, Informative

    "Status @ 22:30 NZT, 17:30 Beijing time, 13-01-10: Despite reports to the contrary Google.cn is still censored."

    --
    Attitudes make the difference between Space and Time: we want to MAX our temporal, and MIN our spatial extension.
  4. Falun Gong by Albanach · · Score: 4, Insightful
    1. Re:Falun Gong by Bwerf · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, http://www.google.se/search?hl=zh-CN&q=falun+gong returns yet another different result, at least when it comes to number of hits, so it might just be google trying to optimise for different regions.

      --
      If noone rtfa, then what's the slashdot effect?
    2. Re:Falun Gong by Albanach · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Yahoo is especially interesting here. If you search for something innocuous like Hong Kong

      http://search.cn.yahoo.com/search?p=Hong%20Kong

      It works fine.

      Change the search

      http://search.cn.yahoo.com/search?p=Falun%20Gong

      And yahoo.cn drops the connection, and seems to do so based on your IP for a few minutes thereafter.

    3. Re:Falun Gong by lobsterturd · · Score: 5, Informative

      That's how the Great Firewall tells you that something is "inappropriate." search.cn.yahoo.com is located in China, and the GFW is applied to all Internet traffic passing in/out of China, not just consumer machines, so it's not Yahoo that's blocking that particular term but the government.

      This will work with any Mainland Chinese site, for example: http://www.mps.gov.cn/Falun%20Gong

    4. Re:Falun Gong by PhilHibbs · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think the page rank algorithm favours pages linked within the country of the search server. If not many .cn sites link to www.falundafa.org, then that site will have a low page rank on google.cn.

    5. Re:Falun Gong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Thank god Yahoo is such a joke because their search results are particularly nasty. Not only do they not show results if you search for Falun Gong, but it will block you from doing ANY other searches (for a while) if you even try. Yahoo would be dangerous if they were a stronger company that anyone gave a shit about.

      That's not Yahoo, that's the Great Firewall between you and Yahoo.cn. If you would be searching Google.com while in China for "Falun Gong", the Google connection would be reset as well, since the traffic would go through the "Golden Shield".

  5. Germany still censored by Affenkopf · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Meanwhile German Google is still censored (no youporn and a few other porn sites, no neo nazi sites).

    I wish our government would do something to piss Google off so that we could have uncensored search results (to be fair: In Germany we can just switch from the censored google.de to the uncensored google.com)

    1. Re:Germany still censored by nospam007 · · Score: 4, Informative

      "In Germany we can just switch from the censored google.de to the uncensored google.com"

      But you may need to add /ncr to the google url to avoid automatic country redirection depending on your location.

      http://www.google.com/support/websearch/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=873

    2. Re:Germany still censored by MSBob · · Score: 4, Funny

      Youporn banned in Germany? How come?

      --
      Your pizza just the way you ought to have it.
    3. Re:Germany still censored by lukas84 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Censorship in Germany and many other European countries is done under the guise of "protecting the children" ("Jugendschutz").

      Germany hasn't really learned from it's past and is heavily promoting censorship as a solution to all issues. For example, it is illegal to deny that the holocaust happened.

    4. Re:Germany still censored by Spatial · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Censorship attempts to remove the ability to decide for yourself. Presumably he's interested in that ability and not the specific material.

  6. Good for you, Google by Orleron · · Score: 4, Funny

    The Chinese need to learn that we will not do business with them until they clean up their human rights issues, implement better protection of IP, and stop being the dishonorable cheaters that they are.

    1. Re:Good for you, Google by Infernal+Device · · Score: 3, Interesting

      This is a mere trifle to the Chinese government. Real change will have to come from within China - when enough of them want a change in their government and way of life, they'll fight for it. Otherwise, there's really not much anyone can do that will improve things measurably.

      --
      "My God...it's full of trolls!"
    2. Re:Good for you, Google by Tom · · Score: 4, Insightful

      when enough of them want a change in their government and way of life, they'll fight for it.

      Exactly. And you know what? They don't want to change either.

      Like it or not, the current government has lifted a billion people out of horrible poverty. Some are still poor, some are doing ok, but all of them are a lot better off than their parents or grandparents were. Even the definition of "poor" has changed. The "poor" chinese of today would have been considered well-off less than a hundred years ago.

      And idealism aside, hunger trumps liberty.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    3. Re:Good for you, Google by cromar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You know they have fought before and lost right? Even as recently as 20 years ago? It's easy to chastise the people of China when you don't live there, but I personally cannot imagine going through what they do. You even assume the majority of people in China understand the Western idea of personal liberty. It's easy to make arm chair judgments about them, but I wager that if you were in their shoes, and it was your ass on the line, you wouldn't be able to do as much as you seem to think you could.

    4. Re:Good for you, Google by cromar · · Score: 3, Informative

      Even the definition of "poor" has changed. The "poor" chinese of today would have been considered well-off less than a hundred years ago.

      I don't necessarily disagree with you on the other points, but it seems that this is largely true of the developed world...

    5. Re:Good for you, Google by Tom · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ghandi was chinese?

      Damn, my geography needs work...

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  7. A Business Decision? by Ukab+the+Great · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think it's more likely that there were other business considerations that had already made Google feel like it was difficult to do business with China, and the censorship lift is just PR gravy.

    1. Re:A Business Decision? by Z8 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      News: Google enters China, censors results
      Slashdot: This proves Google is an evil multinational company just after money!

      News: Google uncensors results, leaves China.
      Slashdot: Yet more evidence Google will do anything for money!

    2. Re:A Business Decision? by Abcd1234 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Uh, they already said there were business considerations. Specifically, their systems, along with those of quite a few other large companies, were hacked in order to gain information about Chinese dissidents.

  8. Re:NSFW? by owlnation · · Score: 2, Funny

    No need to explain the term. He's probably away from his computer, being perp-walked to HR as I type.

  9. Re:Megacorps by dintech · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Who needs military to control the government when you've got cash?

  10. Re:Images definitely still censored by Majin+Bubu · · Score: 2, Interesting
    --
    Ander

    @=

  11. Do No Evil by castironpigeon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Google gets a fair amount of /. bashing just because it's grown as large as it has and sometimes they may even deserve it, but here we have an example of Google doing a good thing. You don't see many megacorporations taking a stand against internet censorship. Even if Google profits from this in some way and it isn't entirely a selfless act it's nice to see them doing something that benefits us little people too.

    --
    mmmm...forbidden donut
  12. Re:NSFW? by ElSupreme · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Funny it is Slashdot 'accidently popping up' for hour on end that has convinced me to face my screen away from the opening of my cubicle.

    --
    My addiction: Arguing with idiots. AKA Slashdot!
  13. I give them credit for not being evil by Agent0013 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I remember back when Google first decided to offer censored search in China they were questioned as to whether they were in keeping with their motto of not being evil. Some said that by cooperating with China at all they are participating in the evil being done. Others thought that it was better to offer some search to the people rather than none. People can still make use of a good quality search, and some illicit material will still be available since no filter is 100%.

    Now they could just keep cooperating with the Chinese government to stay in business there. Most companies would probably do that rather than stand up for themselves and fight back. It helps themselves as much as it is a good thing to stand for.

    They probably have many non-altruistic reasons for doing what they are doing. But I bet the thought of their image, or brand, and how it would look depending on what they do had an impact on what they decided. So by having the motto of "Don't be Evil", they actually become less evil. And if doing good things helps their image, and helps to make them money, then so-be-it. At least good things are being done rather than more of the status-quo of mostly evil.

    Hurray Google!

    --

    -- ssoorrrryy,, dduupplleexx sswwiittcchh oonn.. -Quote found on actual fortune cookie.
  14. Google Just Can't Win by vampire_baozi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No matter what it does, we are too distrustful of large MNCs to ever assume they are capable of actually making a principled stand that would run contrary to business interests. The Google narrative of the situation is fairly clear: one of the costs of doing business in China was to kowtow to government censorship demands (complying with Chinese law, as they comply with American law in America and German law in Germany). They felt it was wrong (or not) but claimed the greater evil would be to NOT enter the search market, leaving it to be dominated by companies who would have no qualms about censorship whatsoever (see Yahoo handing over IP addresses).
    They later discovered they had no leverage; the good they could do by being able to provide search results that were clearly marked as "censored" was outweighed by the harm that could be done by leaked information, and they were unable to do anything (within the bounds of Chinese law) to prevent it. Thus, they reevaluated, and are considering exiting the market.

    The alternative is that it is simply a business strategy switch: they discovered the market is unprofitable, and are exiting or some shit.

    The problem with this is simple: even if we concede that Chinese consumers don't click or buy anything through Google ads, rendering their business model moot, Google needs the market share. The Chinese will not always be poor. There are huge number of middle class Chinese in cities with enough disposable income to make purchases. The revenue streams will grow over the years. If they cede the market to Baidu, by the time the Chinese are rich enough to afford to buy products online through ads, Google will have to enter the market as a new player with no market share to start. Not being a business analyst for google, I do not know exactly how many clicks they need to remain profitable in China. But given the huge numbers of urban Chinese with money to spare, and the impressive rate of growth, it will only be a matter of time before (urban) China catches up to Taiwan and Korea (and eventually Japan). When that happens, it will be a much more profitable market than the US and Europe.

    While I'm inclined to distrust MNCs, it is possible that they really are trying to make a stand. Did anyone know/leak this before it was announced, making them fear a Yahoo-style shitstorm? Otherwise, it would have made more sense to keep it quiet, simply say there was an attack, and leave the targets of the attack unannounced, and then continue business as usual. But no matter what it does, it will be accused of simply following the money. But hey, props to google for trying, in my book.

  15. Re:NSFW?? by clone53421 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    To me, NSFW really only applies to something that would be visible and noticeable to someone walking past. “NSFW language” can’t really exist unless perhaps the typeface is so large that it’s easily readable to others. It’s not like I expect anyone to be reading over my shoulder, or not without me knowing it anyway.

    --
    Alexander Peter Kristopeit bought his basement from his mommy for one dollar.
  16. No cherry picking by FatAlb3rt · · Score: 4, Informative

    "Current Status @ 23:30 NZT, 18:30 Beijing time, 13-01-10: Heaps of reports of uncensored stuff. My post below may not be accurate. The images below show massive differences between google.cn results and google.com.hk results. The difference may be just a residual effect of the censorship - because Google ranks stuff based on links, previously censored materials may still be poorly ranked, even though they're no longer censored."

  17. Still censored, but don't care by euyis · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I am Chinese and have been using the Google.com (/ncr) for years. Never touched that .cn shit, and actually we call it "the eunuch Google".

  18. Re:Megacorps by TheRaven64 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A government is geographically limited. A big business can set up wherever it wants and, if sufficiently powerful, have its rules supersede the local laws. In many places in the world, corporations are more overtly powerful than governments.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  19. Re:No they haven't! by resfilter · · Score: 5, Informative

    although the results are still slightly fitered, you are searching incorrectly.

    the chinese people refer to the tiananmen square protest as the june fourth incident.

  20. Re: SpellCheck II by conureman · · Score: 2, Funny

    Is any one working on this? With all the excess capacity in the hardware, a software upgrade is overdue. Seems like a viable product to me.

    --
    The cost of that cleanup, of course, will be borne by taxpayers, not industry.
  21. Re:Images definitely still censored by blee37 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    According to CNN, Tiananmen is the proper spelling and Tienanmen is a misspelling that is not properly censored due to technical errors. Apparently those errors have not been fixed since 2006. http://money.cnn.com/2006/01/30/technology/browser0130/index.htm Thanks for the link though. Impressive number of tank man pictures. I hope Google does provide uncensored search, even if for just a few hours.

  22. Re:Megacorps by DragonWriter · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A government is geographically limited. A big business can set up wherever it wants and, if sufficiently powerful, have its rules supersede the local laws.

    A government that is sufficiently powerful can also set up wherever it wants, and have its rules supersede the local laws (both in the practical sense, and even further by simply replacing the government with one that will impose new laws more to the intruding government's liking -- or the intruding government can just displace the local government and assume the job for itself.) Historically, examples of this are quite common.

    So, I would say that the contrast you draw is quite misguided.

  23. Re:Stand by for Tank Guy to be wearing Google T-sh by farble1670 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The original press release did not say they lifted censorship. It said they would discuss the legality of "legal unfiltered results"

    you are 1/2 right. the quote is below,

    We have decided we are no longer willing to continue censoring our results on Google.cn, and so over the next few weeks we will be discussing with the Chinese government the basis on which we could operate an unfiltered search engine within the law, if at all.

    they haven't done it yet (at the time the blog was written), but they said they have decided that they will lift censorship, period. the decision was made. this is a pretty strong statement. if they backtracked on this, they would face a PR nightmare.

  24. Re:Megacorps by Brian+Gordon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    from TFA:

    "It's not Google leaving China, it's China leaving the world."

  25. Re: SpellCheck II by hitnrunrambler · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Hey don't laugh. It could be very helpful to use an MS-office style (Does OO.org do it too? I hardly use office apps anymore) green squiggly to highlight potential errors or areas that could be improved - light up "seize and desist" "win or loose" "for all intensive purposes", etc and it could make a huge difference to the spelling/grammar/writing-impaired.

    Maybe... But do we want everyone to have that sort of power?

    Spelling, word comprehension, and sentence structure can all add a veneer of validity; and particularly in the case of online posts that veneer can make a big impression.
    I appreciate seeing bad grammar online the same way I appreciate the presence of racism in political discussions. Sometimes it nice to have a big flag pointing out those who either don't have a clue or aren't willing to place thought before speech.

  26. Re:NSFW?? by mgblst · · Score: 2, Funny

    What about if the words are arranged as ascii porn?