Taking heat over censorship in China Video
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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."
Rep. Christopher Smith, R.-N.J., demonstrates how the results of a Google search are censored in China. Then he lays out a series of questions on how U.S.companies cooperate with the Chinese government.
Can the NSA look at your e-mail?
Rep. Brad Sherman, D-Calif., asked Yahoo spokesman and general\r\ncounsel Michael Callahan whether the NSA has access to the e-mail of\r\nprivate American citizens. Hear the discussion exchanged during the\r\nHouse sub-committee's hearing on Internet security and censorship in\r\nChina.\r\n
Google on operating inside China
Elliot Schrage, Google's vice president for corporate communications and public affairs, talks about the company's competitive situation in China. He then hears subcommittee head Rep. James Leach, R-Iowa, accuse Google of becoming a Chinese government functionary.
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.
Former HP execs take the Fifth
Three former HP executives, including chief counsel Ann Baskins, took the Fifth Amendment during a hearing on Sept. 28, 2006. The proceedings, therefore, began with a string of non-answers to subcommittee chair Ed Whitefield (R-Ky.).
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.
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.
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\r\nto Reporters Without Borders.
Chinese publisher in exile testifies
Harry Wu, publisher of the China Information Center, speaks to a\r\nHouse subcommittee about the punishment of dissidents in China. Wu said\r\nCisco gear is used to help police surveillance there.\r\n
