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Google Boots Open Source Anti-Censorship Tool From Chrome Store (torrentfreak.com)

Google has removed the open-source Ahoy! extension from the Chrome store with little explanation. The tool facilitated access to more than 1,700 blocked sites in Portugal by routing traffic through its own proxies. TorrentFreak reports: After servicing 100,000 users last December, Ahoy! grew to almost 185,000 users this year. However, progress and indeed the project itself is now under threat after arbitrary action by Google. "Google decided to remove us from Chrome's Web Store without any justification," team member Henrique Mouta informs TF. "We always make sure our code is high quality, secure and 100% free (as in beer and as in freedom). All the source code is open source. And we're pretty sure we never broke any of the Google's marketplace rules."

Henrique says he's tried to reach out to Google but finding someone to help has proven impossible. Even re-submitting Ahoy! to Google from scratch hasn't helped the situation. "I tried and resubmitted the plugin but it was refused after a few hours and without any justification," Henrique says. "Google never reached us or notified us about the removal from Chrome Web Store. We never got a single email justifying what happened, why have we been removed from the store, or/and what are we breaching and how can we fix it." TorrentFreak reached out to Google asking why this anti-censorship tool has been removed from its Chrome store. Despite multiple requests, the search giant failed to respond to us or the Ahoy! team.
Thankfully, the Ahoy! extension is still available on Firefox.

9 of 95 comments (clear)

  1. What happened to "Don't be evil" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They've gone to full-on evil

    1. Re:What happened to "Don't be evil" by misnohmer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, they just redefined what "evil" is to "anything against Google's corporate goals".

  2. Gotta toe the line for China by sjames · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Can't have the Chinese government thinking Google supports routing around censorship, now can we?

    1. Re:Gotta toe the line for China by jodido · · Score: 1, Insightful

      This is not so different from "leftists" who want to prevent anyone they don't like from speaking.

  3. Re:A plugin that hijacks web traffic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Opera turbo mode, VPNs and Tor could all effectively be said to do the same thing. What's not legit about it? Are you saying we should never try to route around censorship?

  4. Play Stores, App Stores by duke_cheetah2003 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is why these things were an awful idea. We knew this would happen, platforms kicking off people for.. no reason at all.

    Boycott this garbage, App Store, Play Store, Microsoft Store, it's all bullshit. Don't support it, don't publish to it, don't buy from it. The only thing these corporate entities understand is profit/loss. So seriously, vote with your wallet, don't buy anything from any of these sites.

    Only a united front vs. these abominations will yield results. We all have to take a stand and say 'no.' Even you folks publishing and making money, stop, for the greater good. Go back to the old school software distribution, do it yourself. Building a website to host your app is cheap and easy, there's no excuse. If you can develop an app, you're definitely smart enough to set up a cloud based server.

  5. Re:Likely to appease a foreign authoritarian regim by BlueStrat · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Lately Google has been actively courting regimes who are heavy on censorship.

    "Foreign authoritarian regimes"?

    Maybe, at least partially.

    Have you heard what the US FBI, for instance, has been saying lately about things like the widespread use of strong encryption? I don't think it would be a stretch to assume US TLAs would frown upon this type of anonymizing tool for the same sort of reasons they currently object to the widespread use of strong encryption.

    When you start talking about authoritarian regimes, don't leave out the US government which is one of the largest and most intrusive.

    Big Brother insists you not obstruct your Telescreen, Comrade!

    Strat

    --
    Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
  6. Re:Google is pro censorship by Kohath · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Don't be evil" was the young Google. Their new motto is "power corrupts".

  7. Re:No shit, Sherlock by JMJimmy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Everyone wanted a walled garden cause it was "easier"

    This was entirely predictable and dismissed by those who said things like this would never happen.