Why Google finally saw red in China (Comment)
January 21st, 2010 - 2:57 pm ICT by IANSBy Prasanto K. Roy
There’s no polite way to put this. China is a rogue nation, a military dictatorship masquerading as a people’s government. It’s an apparent economic success in the short term, but its aspiration to become an economic superpower is not compatible with its political model.
That’s a system backed not by the people’s will, but by raw military power. Its guiding principles are control and paranoia. All media, all information, is censored. If you politely disagree with the system, you are locked up for 11 years, if you’re lucky. If you were in China writing what I am writing here in India, you would simply disappear.
So when the world’s most influential tech company from the world’s most influential nation bowed to this political system and launched a self-censored Google.cn search in January 2006, it wasn’t sustainable. It was also incompatible with Google’s corporate motto: “Don’t Be Evil”. Even with Google’s justification that “increased access to information for people in China and a more open Internet outweighed our discomfort in agreeing to censor some results”.
Most famously, if you simply search for Tiananmen Square on Google.com, you get tanks and bloodshed , but on Google.cn you get flowers and sunshine .
So even if David Drummond’s Jan 12 blog post, “A new approach to China” shocked some people, it wasn’t completely unexpected. Google’s top lawyer’s words were careful: “In mid-December, we detected a highly sophisticated attack on our corporate infrastructure originating from China… what at first appeared to be solely a security incident — albeit a significant one — was something quite different.”
But the meaning was clear: The Chinese government was targeting mail accounts of Chinese human rights activists in China. And that it had “routinely accessed” the Gmail accounts of dozens of human rights activists around the world.
Google, with 31 percent of the China Internet search market, isn’t number one: That’s Baidu, the home-grown web portal (58 percent share), and Baidu will be the biggest gainer if Google pulls out. China is an enormous online market, which claims to have jumped 28 percent in a year to 384 million Internet users, powered mainly by a 120 million jump in mobile Internet users, who reached 233 million. And the Chinese government will get rid of a potential thorn in its side, albeit one that is self-blunted.
But that’s not all. Time was when Russia wore the mantle of the world’s top rogue hacker nation, but China has overtaken it. The US, with its National Security Agency, the Central Security Service, the Central Intelligence Agency and others, is more subtle and sophisticated and maybe even more effective as a hacker nation. Israel is more focused.
Like the low-intensity conflict on India’s borders, China has been waging a low-intensity cyberwar against India and other nations, against businesses even as it plays host to them, and against all those that it views as enemies, including human rights activists, and dissidents on its own soil.
Multinationals have chosen to ignore this, trading some discomfort for economic gain. China continues to bet that as long as it stays below a certain threshold, it will get away with it. It’s a dangerous game that can backfire, and they may have just crossed that line with Google.
But they have pushed the envelope way more with India. M.K. Narayanan, who till a couple of days ago was the country’s national security adviser, has admitted only to Chinese attacks on the Prime Minister’s Office: There is no way our military agencies would admit to falling prey to cyber attacks.
The next war will be fought not with conventional or nuclear weapons, but in cyberspace. Despite our business technology prowess, India is the Athens to China’s Sparta. We are ill equipped to fight that war.
(Prasanto K. Roy is Chief Editor of CyberMedia’s ICT Publications. The views expressed by the author are personal. He can be reached at pkr@cybermedia.co.in)
- Chinese used 'flaws' in Microsoft explorer to hack Google - Jan 16, 2010
- Chinese think tank sees Facebook, other social networking sites as a threat - Jul 10, 2010
- Google challenges China by ending censorship of search results - Jan 13, 2010
- China says Google's decision to stop censoring "totally wrong" - Mar 23, 2010
- Google stops censoring search services on Google.cn - Mar 23, 2010
- Google moves Chinese site to Hong Kong, stops censoring results - Mar 23, 2010
- Google.cn is now Google.com.hk, China says promise violated (Lead) - Mar 23, 2010
- Google in risk of losing license to operate in China - Jun 29, 2010
- China examines Google's mapping request - Feb 02, 2012
- Google may cease operations in China by April 10 - Mar 19, 2010
- Chinese Google readers being redirected to google.com.hk - Mar 23, 2010
- Google pulls out of China, sends Chinese visitors to Hong Kong - Mar 23, 2010
- US to employ a hard-line approach for China following Google deadlock - Mar 19, 2010
- Clinton warns hackers of consequences - Jan 22, 2010
- China Renews Google's License - Jul 12, 2010
Tags: china internet, chinese government, chinese human rights, corporate infrastructure, corporate motto, david drummond, economic success, economic superpower, google, human rights activists, mail accounts, military dictatorship, military power, open internet, political model, rogue nation, search market, security incident, sophisticated attack, tiananmen square