 Google Government requests tool
Greater transparency will benefit everyone, says company
Google
has more than it share of clashes
with governments worldwide. It left
China after it uncensored it search results. And in
the U.S., it occasionally clashes with the U.S. government on DMCA
takedowns and other issues.
Google knows it can't
flatly refuse to engage in any sort of content policing/censorship or
it'd be unable to do business in virtually any nation, including the
U.S. Instead, it's trying to make those government request for
information or content removal as transparent as possible.
It
announced yesterday afternoon a tool that will allow users to browse
through lists of recent government requests. The Government
Requests tool is currently being populated with data from
between July and December 2009 from governments worldwide. It
will be updated every six months with a new list of requests.
The
company writes in its
blog:
"Article
19 of the Universal
Declaration on Human Rights states that 'everyone has the
right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes
freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive
and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of
frontiers.' Written in 1948, the principle applies aptly to today's
Internet -- one of the most important means of free expression in the
world. Yet government censorship of the web is growing rapidly: from
the outright blocking and filtering of sites, to court orders
limiting access to information and legislation forcing companies to
self-censor content."
There
are some exceptions to the data tracking. Countries with fewer
than ten requests are not shown in the tracker. And requested
takedowns of material that violates Google's corporate policy, such
as child pornography, is not reported as Google itself actively
engages in taking it down, so it's hard to determine where the
takedown originated.
Regardless of your feelings on Google,
it's hard not to like this move. After all, it seems like a
fundamental right for citizens to know how their government is
acting.
“So far we have not seen a single Android device that does not infringe on our patents." -- Microsoft General Counsel Brad Smith
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