Google on operating inside China Video
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Elliot Schrage, Google's vice president of corporate communications and corporate affairs, explains to members of Congress Google's deal to operate inside China.
Taking heat over censorship in China
Rep. Christopher Smith chairs the House of Representatives\r\nSubcommittee on Africa, Global Human Rights and International\r\nOperations. At a hearing in Washington, he reads a pointed indictment of\r\nCisco Systems, Google, Microsoft and Yahoo. Smith says the tech\r\ncompanies aid repression by the Chinese government.\r\n
Tech giants' 'nauseating collaboration' in China
In a House subcommittee hearing for global human rights, Rep. Tom Lantos accuses four major U.S. technology companies of "complete compliance" with Chinese repression of civil rights and political dissent. Their actions are, he says, "a disgrace."
Microsoft and censoring blogs in China
Jack Krumholtz, Microsoft's associate general counsel and managing director of federal government affairs, talks about blog censorship on MSN.
Yahoo takes pragmatic approach in China
At PC Forum in Scottsdale, Ariz., Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang talks to Internet guru Esther Dyson about how his company deals with government censorship and other challenges in the Chinese market.
Cisco: Did Cisco help China spy on Internet?
At Wednesday's hearing in Washington, Cisco Systems Vice President and General Counsel Mark Chandler says Internet systems all have built-in filtering capability, and that it's controlled by the service providers.
Nintendo Wii set for Nov. 19 launch in U.S.
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Google Chrome OS demonstration
Vice President of Product Marketing Sundar Pichai gives a virtual tour of Google's new operating system, Chrome OS.
Vice President of Product Marketing Sundar Pichai announces the release of Google Chrome OS, a new operating system based on its Chrome browser.
Fighting Yahoo's China Policies
Reporters Without Borders challenges Yahoo execs at the company's Silicon Valley headquarters on Monday. The issue: data Yahoo released to police in China. The activists brought with them video filmed in Beijing of Mo Shaoping, a lawyer for the dissidents, and of the unnamed brother of a Yahoo Mail user sent to prison based on information given the Chinese government by Yahoo, according to Reporters Without Borders.
