-Caveat Lector-

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/2360351.stm

Friday, 25 October, 2002, 11:38 GMT 12:38 UK
Google censoring web content

Should  Google decide what counts as an unacceptable website?
Bill Thompson doesn't think so.

Since its creation in 1998 Google - at www.google.com, as you
probably know already - has become the world's best search engine
and the starting point of choice for almost all my web queries.

It has even generated its own verb - to do some googling around
means sitting there playing with queries and exploring the obscure
parts of the Web that are revealed by looking for odd or even
improperly spelled phrases.

Nobody expects Google, or any index, to be perfect, since the Web
is growing and changing so fast and many parts of it are generated
from databases and therefore essentially impossible for a search
engine to find or classify.

However, researchers at the highly-respected Berkman Center for
Internet and Society at Harvard University have found that the
company is actively removing sites from its database, and that this
censorship is going unnoticed.

Regional differences
Jonathan Zittrain and Benjamin Edelman have built up a reputation
for their careful analysis of the ways in which web content is filtered,
censored and controlled.

They have looked in detail at the practices of national governments,
specifically China and Saudi Arabia, and provided lots of useful
information for those of us who want to promote freedom of speech
both online and offline.

Their latest paper deals with the differences between the results
returned when searching google.com, the US/world version of the
site, the French site at google.fr and the German site at google.de.

They have discovered over one hundred sites which can be found
by searchers in the US but not by those in Germany or France.

They are mostly sites that feature racist material or that deny the
existence of the Holocaust, such as Stormfront, a white pride site
filled with white nationalist essays by former Ku Klux Klan leader
David Duke.

Legal battles
Responding to the discovery, Google spokesman Nate Tyler said on
tech news programme ZDNN that the sites were removed to avoid
the possibility of legal action being taken against the company, and
that each site was removed only after a specific complaint from the
government of the country concerned.

On first sight this seems perfectly reasonable - after all, Google isn't
a public service but a private company trying to make money out of
its technology and database, and it has no obligation to index
everything.

It certainly has a duty to its owners (it's a privately held company) to
stay out of legal battles with governments, since they can be pretty
expensive.

Unfortunately things are not that simple, and the censorship of the
French and German versions of the Google database is a clear
demonstration of just what is wrong with internet regulation today.

What is happening is that a government is saying to Google: 'we
don't like that website - so drop it from your database' and the
company is acquiescing.

The people running the website aren't told. The people looking for
the website aren't told - they aren't even told that this policy exists.

The rest of us aren't being told either - Google's Nate Tyler said
clearly that 'as a matter of company policy we do not provide
specific details about why or when we removed any one particular
site from our index.'

No due process
The result is that one of the web's most important tools is being
deliberately broken at the request of governments, with no publicity,
no legal review and no court orders.

The sites involved  may or may not be illegal in France or Germany -
we don't know because the case never comes to court, and is never
tested. All we know is that they aren't wanted.

The problem is not that content is being censored - that is inevitable
and in many cases desirable.

I agree with our current laws against child pornography and have no
difficulty at all endorsing the view that these sites should not be
allowed online.

I'll support the team at Google if they want to spend their time
removing them. In fact,  a search for 'lolita pictures' finds 291,000
entries in the US index, so this is obviously less of a priority for
them.

The problem is that Google itself is deciding what should be
censored and that its motives are entirely commercial, making it
possible for government agencies to influence it without having to go
through due process or defend their requests in public.

I believe we need to move towards an internet that is properly
regulated, where decisions like this can only be made through the
courts.

I would rather have a net where Google and other search engine
providers had a legal obligation to provide full and comprehensive
results to the best of their technical ability and to inform searchers of
any areas where content had been removed from their index on
legal grounds, even if that also gives governments the ability to
block certain sites from the index.

Telling nobody
I know that would give the government of the People's Republic of
China the power to censor what their citizens can see online - but
they have that power already and use it, building firewalls and filters
around their part of the net.

At least if the whole internet was properly regulated and brought into
the legal framework that governs all other areas of our life we would
be able to have a sensible discussion about the limits of regulation
and control.

As it is, we have private companies like Google deciding what we
can and can't see based on their self-interested readings of poorly-
drafted national laws, taking advice from unnamed and
unaccountable Government agencies and telling nobody what is
going on.

Anything has to be better than that, surely?

And what happens when someone in the French Ministry of Culture
reads this article and decides that, by giving publicity to Stormfront,
I am acting against the French public interest?

Will they dispatch a quick e-mail to Google and ask them to remove
this page - or this whole site - from their index?

Bill Thompson is a regular commentator on the BBC World Service
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Books won't stay banned.  They won't burn.  Ideas won't go to jail.
In the long run of history, the censor and the inquisitor have always
lost. ~~A.W.Grisold

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