Looks to me like Obama supporters want to stifle dissent...

======

http://blogs.zdnet.com/Murphy/?p=1182

Yesterday, Americans celebrated Independence Day - and I got to spent too
much of the day loafing around paging lazily through a whole bunch of more
or less nutty political sites.

One of things I noticed was the marked difference in treatment accorded a
particularly nasty little controversy around whether or not google was
purposely shutting down anti-Obama sites on its blogger.com network.

Here's the salient bit from what appears to have been the first blast of the
whistle - by Warner
Huston<http://www.stoptheaclu.com/archives/2008/06/29/google-shuts-down-anti-obama-sites-on-its-blogger-platform>

It looks like Google has officially joined the Barack Obama campaign and
decided that its contribution would be to shut down any blog on the Google
owned Blogspot.com blogging system that has an anti-Obama message. Yes, it
sure seems that Google has begun to go through its many thousands of blogs
to lock out the owners of anti-Obama blogs so that the noObama message is
effectively squelched.

 A bit after writing this he added this update above his original story:

Update: Perhaps it isn't google, but Obamaniacs taking advantage of google's
faulty sytem. A commenter explains:

The problem with blogger is that a group of people with an ax to grind can
report any blog as spam and after enough complaints, it's automatically
suspended until a real live human being can get around to examining it. If
enough complaints are registered with blogger, you might get a response
within 5 days but it takes a concerted effort. This is a huge problem with
blogger and something google needs to get a handle on.

 Regardless who is at fault, this shutting down of free speech is
disturbing.

 As it turns out the person who wrote the comment appears to have been
correct: blogger.com, and many of its righter users, seem to have been the
victims of a co-ordinated attempt to silence perceived opponents.

At the personal level the resemblence to groklaw's policy of presuring
editors to shut up writers critizing them struck me as "a
birds-of-a-feather" problem, but what was actually most interesting about
the whole mess was that it produced an uproar in the right wing blogosphere
but went largely unmentioned, and certainly uncondemned, in the much more
populous liberal blogosphere.

The story made headlines, for example, at
hotair<http://hotair.com/archives/2008/06/30/now-just-imagine-blogger-was-the-fec>but
appears
to have gone 
unmentioned<http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=blogspot+google+shutdown+anti-obama+sites++%28site:huffingtonpost.com+OR+site:moveon.org+OR+site:dailykos.com%29&start=30&sa=N>on
dailykos, the huffingtonpost, and
moveon.org.

The specific issue is unimportant to most technology managers, but in more
general terms this is a problem affecting all of cloud computing: trust your
business to an Amazon, a Microsoft, or a Google, and you become vulnerable
to a wholly new kind of denial of service attack - one that can be triggered
by essentially unrelated employee actions or opinions and hold your entire
business hostage to the service provider's business processes.

"Five days" with "a concerted effort" is the guy's description of google's
remediation process - and if you don't think a business contract on
something like email will ever be treated the same way: think about your
business relationship with monopoly suppliers from telcos to Microsoft.


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