Like other Internet players, Yahoo insists it has to play by the local rules in China, and thinks its place there can ultimately benefit the Chinese people.
Everything started when a Chinese journalist named sharing a 'state secret': a warning from the Chinese government not to make a lot of noise about the 15th anniversary of the
The fiercest criticism came from Liu Xiaobo, a Chinese dissident in Beijing. The Times excerpted parts of a translated letter appearing on Cicus.org, where Liu took Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang to task:
"I must tell you that my indignation at and contempt for you and your company are not a bit less than my indignation at and contempt for the Communist regime...Profit makes you dull in morality," Liu's lengthy and scathing message continued. "Did it ever occur to you that it is a shame for you to be considered a traitor to your customer Shi Tao?"
Yahoo thinks the path to enlightenment comes from staying the course instead of pulling out, the Times reported:
"I've always taken the attitude that you're better off playing by the government's rules and getting there," the Yahoo chairman, Terry Semel, told attendees of the Web 2.0 conference in San Francisco this month. "Part of our role in any form of media is to get whatever we can into those countries and to show and to enable people, slowly, to see the Western way and what our culture is like, and to learn."
David Utter is a staff writer for murdok covering technology and business. Email him
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Chinese Dissident Blasts Yahoo
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