By
Andrew Donoghue
Thursday, January 05 2006 10:00 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/internet/0,39044908,39302927,00.htm
Microsoft has admitted to removing the blog of an outspoken Chinese
journalist from its MSN Spaces site, citing its policy of adhering to local
laws.
The blog, written by Zhao Jing, also known as Michael Anti, was removed from
MSN servers on Dec. 31, according to investigative journalist and former CNN
reporter Rebecca Mackinnon. She claimed that the blog was actively
removed by MSN staff rather than being blocked by Chinese authorities.
A Microsoft representative told ZDNet UK on Wednesday that it blocked Anti's MSN Space blog to help ensure that the service complied
with local laws in China.
"MSN is committed to ensuring that products and services comply with global
and local laws, norms and industry practices. Most countries have laws and
practices that require companies providing online services to make the Internet
safe for local users. Occasionally, as in China, local laws and practices
require consideration of unique elements," the representative said.
Questions still remain over why a site believed to be hosted in the United
States has to comply with Chinese law. Microsoft responded to requests for more
information on this issue by stating that "Microsoft is a multinational business
and, as such, needs to manage the reality of operating in countries around the
world."
Responding to Mackinnon's report, Microsoft's own in-house blogger, Robert Scoble, said he was "depressed" by the news and offered
Anti the opportunity to blog via his site.
"Guys over at MSN: Sorry, I don't agree with your being used as a state-run
thug," he said. "It's one thing to pull a list of words out of a blog using an
algorithm. It's another thing to become an agent of a government and censor an
entire blogger's work," Scoble wrote.
Scoble's comments referred to reports in June 2005, when Microsoft
acknowledged censoring
words such as "freedom" and "democracy" from its Chinese MSN portal. In an
e-mail sent to ZDNet UK sister site Silicon.com, Microsoft said, "We don't
disclose the list, but we do have the ability to change and update the filter,
as needed, to help ensure we abide by the laws, regulations and norms of China."
Scoble's latest blog entry on the issue, made shortly before his departure to
the Consumer Electronics Show (CES), which begins this week, states that he has had problems tracking
down the relevant parties in Microsoft to comment on the issue and that some
individuals have criticized him for commenting on the issue without checking
further.
"I have been talking to lots of people today, though, inside and outside of
Microsoft. In every instance, they asked me to keep those conversations
confidential. Why? Cause we're talking about international relations here--and
the lives of employees," Scoble wrote.
In September, Yahoo was heavily criticized when it emerged that the portal
company had provided information to Chinese authorities that led
to the imprisonment of a Chinese journalist.
Andrew Donoghue of ZDNet UK reported from London.