News
        
        U.S. Companies Urge Action Against Internet Censorship
        
        
        
        American technology giants urged the U.S. government Tuesday to do more to 
  confront China and other countries about Internet censorship. 
Microsoft Corp., Yahoo Inc. and Google Inc. also defended themselves against 
  accusations that they have helped governments such as China's crush dissent 
  in return for access to booming Internet markets.
Andrew McLaughlin, senior counsel for Google, told a State Department-sponsored 
  conference on Internet freedom that his company is trying to use its "presence 
  in countries that are restrictive to provide communication" options, such 
  as e-mail and blogs, for people who may not have other ways to talk to each 
  other freely.
McLaughlin urged the U.S. government to fight for technology and information 
  companies' rights in the international trade arena.
"What we need is for censorship to be treated as a trade barrier and be 
  put right up at the top of our agenda when it comes to bilateral" free 
  trade agreements, McLaughlin said.
Michael Samway, deputy general counsel at Yahoo, also appealed for more action 
  from Washington. "The State Department has the tools to engage foreign 
  governments on openness," he said. "We do have significant leverage 
  as companies, but the government has the most significant amount of leverage, 
  and we do need the government to be in play."
Barry Lowenkron, the U.S. assistant secretary of state for human rights, said 
  in an opening statement that the United States "will not stand by in the 
  face of unwarranted restrictions of Internet use by oppressive regimes."
At a House of Representatives hearing last year, the three tech companies and 
  Cisco Systems Inc., which did not appear at Tuesday's meeting, received blistering 
  criticism for their work in China from lawmakers who said the companies had 
  abandoned social responsibility in a deal for greater wealth.
With 137 million people online, China is on track to surpass the United States 
  in the next two years as the nation with the most Internet users, Chinese officials 
  have said.
China fiercely polices Internet content. Filters block objectionable foreign 
  Web sites; regulations ban what the Chinese consider subversive and pornographic 
  content and require service providers to enforce censorship.
China says its aims are to protect its citizens from "the immoral and 
  harmful content" of the Internet.