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Google Blocks 'Innocence of Muslim' Video In Indonesia and India

hypnosec writes "Google has blocked the anti-Islamic video, which was posted on YouTube, in Indonesia as well as India. YouTube has already denied a complete removal of the clip 'Innocence of Muslims' that mocks Islam and Prophet Mohammed. The video has led to protests and violence across the Arab world. The foreign ministry spokesperson of Indonesia and India have confirmed that Google has blocked access to the video. Indonesia has also asked RIM to filter the video on its smartphones."

15 of 484 comments (clear)

  1. Re:What happened to freedom of speech by wienerschnizzel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Google complies with the laws of the country it operates in. If they are required by law to remove something, they do it.

    Are you suggesting that big companies in general should be exempt from the law and obey it only as they see fit?

  2. Are they also going to block this image by Chrisq · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Are they going to block this image from the Onion, entitled "No One Murdered Because Of This Image"? After all everyone tells us that Muslims are no worse than people of other religions, so surely this insult to Christianity, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Judaism will have the members of respective religions storming embassies and murdering people all over the place?

    If not some people might suspect that Islam really is a more violent and savage religion than the others

    1. Re:Are they also going to block this image by Chrisq · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The problem isn't as much Islam as the assholes who put themselves in charge of preaching "Islam" to the masses.

      To paraphrase, "the problem is not so much Islam as what the followers of Islam believe and is taught by the leaders of Islam.

      Just because the Catholic church is a mess (and it's gotten much better), doesn't mean Christianity is bad.

      The Catholic church is guilty of many things, indifference, cover-up, etc. but I have not heard one Catholic priest say that child abuse is right, and that those who follow Catholicism should support it and encourage their kids to put up with it. I have heard many Muslim teachers and Imams say that killing people over films, books, cartoons, lifestyle, or choice of belief is not just right but an obligation.

  3. Re:What happened to freedom of speech by quantaman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Frankly I'm not hugely bothered by it.

    Nowhere is freedom of speech absolute, it's limited by the ability of the society to tolerate it. Even in the US advocating violence can get you in trouble along with forms of obscenity. Quite relevantly public nudity, which I'd qualify as a form of speech, will get you arrested in a lot of places, but if society was more comfortable with the idea than that restriction would be removed.

    In these countries video they're not used to this level of freedom of speech and their society needs time to adapt. I like pushing the boundaries of free speech in these countries, but sometimes things go viral and push past their ability to deal with it. Given that people are dying as a direct result of this video I can see the justification of some limited censorship (given that it's far beyond what they're allowed to do in their own society).

    As to whether it's effective is another matter, censorship can easily be circumvented, but maybe it's enough of a hindrance to stop it from going viral.

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    I stole this Sig
  4. Re:Not Convenient by Sqr(twg) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Freedom of speech is a concept that applies to law-making, not web-hosting. Google has done nothing to prevent the filmmakers from distributing this trailer. They are also not blocking it from search.

    All they do is abstain from hosting it themselves in ceratin countries in the same way as a US newspaper might refuse to publish a nazi propaganda ad. People perceive publication/distribution as (weak) a form of endorsment, and Google wants to avoid this.

    (Also, the movie itself seems to be a piece of crap, regardess of any point it's trying to make.)

  5. Re:What happened to freedom of speech by wienerschnizzel · · Score: 5, Informative

    Don't understand. If anything your remark only supports the point that companies should comply with the law.

  6. Re:Well, with a lot of differences by miketheanimal · · Score: 5, Informative

    England already has Sharia courts.

    This is technically true but grossly misleading: England also already has Jewish courts. They have exactly the same standing, which is they have no standing in law. They operate purely where the plaintiffs agree to abide by their judgement. Really, they are no different from say two people going to a mutual friend and asking the friend to adjudicate on a disagreement.

  7. Re:What happened to freedom of speech by circletimessquare · · Score: 5, Insightful

    it's a tough call

    1. there are laws in china that are odious and disgusting in terms of privacy invasion and censorship. such that an american company operating there, by submitting to that law, breaks it's fidelity with the principles of its home country in ways that stink. but google has, in fact, stood up to china in some ways, such as with censorship, and lost market share in china due to that and pissed off the chinese government. go google!

    http://tech.slashdot.org/story/12/06/01/1450204/google-highlights-censored-search-terms-in-china

    other western companies, for example, will do business with oppressive regimes in ways that support those oppressive regimes in evil and odious ways:

    http://yro.slashdot.org/story/12/08/31/1434229/finspy-commercial-spyware-abused-by-governments

    what a company like this deserves is to be shut down, kicked out, and have their business actively destroyed in righteous indignation of operating from the west while grossly violating important beliefs of the west and in support of evil regimes

    2. however, there are also local laws that, while you can find more abstract objections with them, it makes prudent sense to just comply with the local laws to continue doing business there, and also be in a position to effect long term liberty improving change in that country by remaining a force there

    such as, for example, with this stupid video: while speech should be free all over the world, it isn't in some places. and going crazy and not cooperating, for example, with germany for not allowing nazi imagery or indonesia for not allowing mohammad imagery, doesn't convince anyone of anything and you just piss off that country and lose market share

    so it's better to just comply with local law on this issue. but on other issues, it's better to stick up your middle finger at oppressive governments. each case is different

    shrewd governance, of countries or companies, is a matter of finesse

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  8. Protests ALL over the World. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This morning, Sept 17, 2012, I've been watching and listenting to reports of riots and civil unrest all over the World - from mostly international sources.

    While the American news sources are focused almost exclusively on the Middle East, their are riots in China, Japan, S. Africa, Western Europe, etc ....

    NONE of them are about Islam. They are all about economics.

    Deep down it's the same with the MIddle Eastern riots. This piss-ant video was just a the spark or an excuse for the riots.

    ANYONE who thinks these riots are really about Islam being "insulted" is horribly provincial and uninformed.

    An example of something similar in the States would be the Occupy Wall Street protests. It's really not about Wall Street "greed". It's about young people pissed off about the percveived lack of economic opportunities and jobs that are available to them - exactly the same reason all those young people in the Middle East are rioting. Give'em jobs and they'll be back in their homes.

    We have BILLIONS of people trying to get a slice of the ecnomic pie and the pie isn't growing fast enough for us all to have increasing standards of living. Hence, the haves are getting more and the have nots are being left in the dust.

    But go ahead, blame the video and Islam because that's what the media is telling you.

    And go ahead be a smug that you have a nice life because you were smart enough to get a degree in the right field in the right country and live in the right are.

    If this keeps up, YOU will be affected - if not already.

  9. Re:What happened to freedom of speech by flyneye · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Agreed, this is monday morning and I just watched the video here in the u.s.
    I've seen video slamming the tenets of just about any major religion and several obscure ones.
    No reason Islam can't suck it up just like everyone else.
    How many movies cover the Inquisition? The Crusades? Bad Buddhist Kung Fu? Make Hindi Gods into animated villains? Show faithful anywhere to be subversive and evil in the name of good?
    Suck it up and quit acting like children and the world will stop treating you like children. Keep it up and get spanked.
    Hey, that's not a threat, that's nearly a physical law of the universe.
    No one asks you to go along with the flow of the world, but if you stand against it, you stand against the world. You stand the chance of an ant to a steamroller, a drop of water in a volcano, an undercover cop at a rap show.
    This is all so unecessary for everyone. A peaceful solution for all can be found at http://www.subgenius.com/ .

    --
    *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
  10. Re:It's phenomenally rubbish by Chrisq · · Score: 5, Informative

    Wow. That was a little harsh? In case you haven't realized this, there are groups, right here in America, that do that sort of thing too - boycotting books, TV shows, movies, or anything that has content they don't agree with. Why was it necessary for the bigoted slur on Muslims?

    Typical Muslim equivocation. Other groups boycotting stores means that it is OK to drag people out of embassies, torture, and murder them. "We are just doing what those Catholics who said 'don't buy the davinci code' did'". I say no it is not the same, if Muslims said "don't watch youtube" then I would not have a problem with it. Its because they react in their traditional manner of killing, rioting, etc.

  11. Re:Not Convenient by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They haven't been killing people over the video. They've been killing people because someone is telling them or paying them to. The video is merely an excuse.

  12. Re:What happened to freedom of speech by Luckyo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's worth noting that there is a significant cultural difference at play here. What one culture considers "free speech", other may consider "defamation", "copyright infringement", "inciting of hatred" and many other things.

    Consider for example the legislation in place in Germany against denying the Holocaust. Under "universal" free speech umbrella, I should be able to talk about Holocaust not having happened and it being a one big lie. Political and historical realities suggest that such free speech has potential to cause catastrophic damage, and as a result it's illegal in Germany, while legal in, for example, some Nordic countries.

    To add to the mess is the current transition from centralised broadcast media to user-generated one. Much of the stuff comes from amateurs with meagre budgets, such as this movie and can be screened worldwide within minutes of being finished. This was an impossibility only a decade ago. We're in a new territory in terms of what is acceptable in different cultures, and as shown with this particular example, free speech can carry significant price paid in blood by those not even related to the speech in question.

    There really are no easy solutions here. Internationalism is very difficult to make work because of cultural clashes like these. We simply have to take it one step at a time and hope and work for the best outcome.

  13. Re:What happened to freedom of speech by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I hope that when people in these countries search for censored stuff, they get presented with a page that says:

    Results hidden from you because angry men with guns pointed at us have made us hide it from you. This is part of their control mechanism over you that lets them maintain their power over you.

    The alternative, Results hidden because you may run around like animals murdering people isn't much better.

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  14. Islam has no sense of humor by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Jews are famous for their self-deprecating humor but Catholics too have mercilessly made fun of their own faith. It was a great liberator because it was not always thus. Once, religion was deadly serious and to question let alone make fun off, that is heresy and that gets you killed.

    A joke might not seem like much but it forces you to not take things to serious, it was essential in tearing down the ivory towers of religion and force it to become accountable. And this was not something that has stopped. The chaos in the Catholic church now people are talking about its abuses is just part of process. For decade, no, centuries, people knew and did not nothing.

    For evil to triumph all that is needed is for good men to do nothing.

    The so called moderate muslim, does nothing. This leaves a tiny handful of reformers who are often prosecuted or killed (Pakistan can't even protect its ministers, what hope does a normal civilian have) fighting the extreme elements who have the backing of countless hangers on, protected behind the veil of silence. Moderates might not agree with all the extremists do but you stick up for your own, regardless what.

    A very recent case in Holland has a man under arrest for having had sexual encounters with over 200 boys. How did he manage to go undetected with so many victims? Well, people knew, but didn't speak out. The community is a closed one and they keep their troubles to themselves...

    There are countless such cases in history and far bigger ones, hidden behind walls of silence and false respect. But humor has created cracks in this facade. In holland, the catholics created the 8 may movement, which basically told the pope to mind his own business. It allowed people to ignore the church doctrine and make up their own minds on birth-control, on politics, on marriage. On everything.

    For modern free youth, it is hard to realize just how controlled religious communities are. In certain place, if a young couple is married and has not produced a kid after the first your, the pastor comes by to have a talk.

    This control is not nice control, it is to make sure everyone walks the line, no dissenters, no free-thinkers. It is very effective. If you don't question, you don't challenge to status quo and those in charge like that.

    Read up on some of the practices of popes, these weren't devout people, they were depraved men who craved power above all else. And they got away with it, because they were beyond question.

    But humor, that challenges everything, breaks down the most powerful with a simple line or drawing. Don't believe me?

    How tall was Napoleon? He was in reality above average height for french men of that age. It was a cartoon drawing that started the idea that he was a small power crazed war monger. A British cartoon made at a time Napoleon was kicking limey ass.

    Spitting Image, a British satire puppet show, ripped politicians and others in power to shreds, and changed politics forever. People remembered the caricature better then the real person.

    In my life time, the same joke has been done twice. The pope speaking and having underwear thrown at him as if he was a popstar. Caused mild affront but was considered part of a free society. The same joke was done off the Ayatollah (the previous one) in Germany. It caused a crisis, the comedian had to be protected and politicians fell over themselves to try to a peace Muslims.

    It wasn't always allowed to joke about the pope, the christian faith. And the Muslim leaders KNOW what humor lead to and they don't want the same to happen. So anyone who dares to question, make humor, challenge, is silenced. Silenced most of all by moderates who do nothing but silently support the extremists by their inactivity. If you donate to your mosque even when you know the money goes to extremist, turning a blind eye to does, still makes you a supported of these extremists.

    Western leaders are at a loss about how to deal with it. In the west, the crumbling of organized religion just seem

    --

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