Wednesday, January 25, 2006 8:52 PM
by
will
In praise of Google in China
BBC's website is blocked but many international apartment buildings get
BBC World. My colleague was watching BBC in her Beijing apartment this
morning when a report on Google's agreement to censor key words and
sites via its upcoming google.com.cn service aired. Needless to say,
they were only moments into explaining how Google had agreed to meet
Chinese content control restrictions when Nanny dropped the hammer on
the Beeb, leaving legions of bewildered expats to wonder exactly what
it was Google was doing with the Chinese authorities. Censoring of
censorship news seems like one of those things that might cause the
universe to collapse in on itself.
For the record, Imagethief thinks that Google is doing the right thing,
and taking a reasonable approach to the conundrum of operating in
China. I have to confess some disagreement with RSF's take-no-prisoners
approach to complicity with the Chinese government censorship regime,
despite my respect for them as an organization. I believe that American
Internet firms should remain in China, but should take as many
reasonable steps as they can to avoid putting themselves in untenable
situations, such as turning over e-mail communications belonging to
Chinese dissidents or journalists. As I
wrote previously,
I think there are shades of grey in this situation, where the benefit
of offering Chinese people more choice can be balanced against
compliance with some of the Chinese government's less onerous
restrictions. Filtering keywords is bad, but it is not in same league
as becoming an unwitting tool in the imprisoning of dissidents.
As
reported yesterday,
Google's approach is to post notifications that some content has been
removed when search returns are filtered. It will also refrain from
offering its "Blogger" blogging service and Gmail service in China, so
as to avoid placing itself in a situation similar to Yahoo's recently,
when it was required by the Chinese authorities to turn over journalist
Shi Tao's e-mails. Those are reasonable steps, and, as someone who has
been party to a few boardroom discussions (PR people get to be flies on
lots of walls), I am willing to believe that there was substantial
debate within Google as to the merits of proceeding down this path
before they made a final decision.
That being said, for any company with interests in China there will be
no perfect defense. Once Google has an established business in China
that they have a stake in protecting, the Chinese government will gain
a degree of leverage over them regardless of whether google.com.cn in
separately incorporated or where the mail or blog servers live. If the
authorities wish to receive information on a Gmail user, they'll still
effectively be able to hold Google's Chinese business hostage. What
would be an interesting --and traumatic-- test for Google would be how
they would react in such a situation, where they have no obvious legal
obligation (as Yahoo apparently did), but a clear interest in
protecting their China business. That is a situation carrying
substantial PR risk because the widely-used "legal obligation" PR
shield, thin as it is, would no longer be available as a defense.
As to why I support US Internet firms being in China, it's a matter of
providing choice for Chinese users, even if that choice isn't as rich
as what users in other countries would get. This is essentially what
Google has offered up as an explanation, and I accept it. We need to be
clear with ourselves what group we're trying to serve by pressuring US
(and European) Internet firms to withdraw from China. It certainly
isn't average Chinese users. Perhaps I see this issue through too much
of a personal filter. (Perhaps all of us bloggers working and living in
China do; we seem to have similar opinions on this issue.) I work with
seventy Chinese colleagues, almost all of whom use Google to run
searches as part of their work and 100% of whom use MSN messenger to
chat with friends, colleagues etc. (Don't ask me why; that's what they
like. I'm an AIM user myself.) I certainly wouldn't want to be the
person wandering around the office explaining that the MSN Messenger
servers were no longer accessible to them because Americans felt it was
inappropriate for Microsoft to offer it as a service to them as long as
it meant following Chinese content restrictions. And I certainly don't
see how restricting them to Chinese Internet services only serves their
interests, even though it may salve our national conscience.
But, as I
also wrote previously,
US Internet firms need to be clear on where they draw the compliance
line, without having to wait to be pressured into it or forced into it
by a crisis. There does come a point at which the tradeoff is no longer
worthwhile. Personally, I think it's worth making concessions to
content filtering to offer wider --if crippled-- choice. But is it
worth being complicit in the detention of journalists and dissidents?
Answering at a personal level again, no. Google's decision not to offer
certain services in China is recognition of this division, even if it
is imperfect and a bit risky. Other companies need to be clear where
the line is for them, and explain it to their stakeholders at home.
Otherwise we won't have seen the last of this issue.
Finally, some will be tempted to say, "they're just doing it for the
money!" Yes. That's what listed, joint-stock corporations do, and what
they should do, pursuant to sensible regulation. I'm not aware of there
being any mystery or hidden agenda about that. From a business point of
view it's totally understandable that companies should want to pursue
the China market. The fact that many do is directly responsible for
Imagethief having a job right now (just so you are clear on my personal
interest in this issue). But, at the same time, companies need to be
consider what costs and risks beyond the obvious financial ones they
are willing to endure to pursue the market here. And exactly what
compromises they are prepared to make.
Disclosure: Imagethief does not represent any company currently
affected by Chinese Internet censorship issues. But he is damn happy
Google is available in China. He is also awaiting the inevitable flames
for taking the position stated above, and is aware that some bloggers
he likes and respects feel otherwise.
As always, personally I think censorship is abhorrent. But I lay it at
the feet of the Chinese government, not Google, and I'd still rather
have Google here than not.
Other (blog) reading (various points of view):
Peking Duck 1: His original post on this issue. Conflicted.
Peking Duck 2: On Google fighting a US government subpoena. A double standard?
Roger Simon (Via the Duck): Boycott Google.
Rebecca MacKinnon: "Don't be too evil."
Danwei: Keep cool...still.
Fons: Yi koutou! Er koutou! San koutou!
Life After Jiangxi: Agonizing...
Added Jan 27th:
Asiapundit: Dumb move by smart guys.
Billsdue: Ka-CHING...Not.