To Google and Youtube Founders and to any third party storing our Private Information. This is a very important security issue. We do not wish to be another “Blogger Kareem”. We do not want to be jailed for voicing our political opinions about the Egyptian whose reputation, worldwide, is to be corrupt, unlawful. There is one section of the video you might not understand. It’s when we say: “Keyword: China”. Explanation: This is a reference to a scandal that happened between Yahoo and the Chinese Government. NOT Google but Yahoo, please do not make the confusion. This was the scandal : It had been said that Yahoo would have “facilitated” the capture of a Chinese dissident by providing his Private Information to the Chinese Government. This story was in Major International Newspapers (search for “Yahoo + China + Dissident” and you’ll find the full story). We do not want a similar situation to happen between the Egyptian Government and Google or Youtube or any other organization storing our Private Information. I’m sure you understand. Thank You. Ahmad Sherif / ahmadsherif
That Google hasn’t already been closed down in China by state authorites proves one thing as far as the current scandal is concerned – China doesn’t need to because it is they who are actually filtering all internet content anyway. Thus the real issue is about Google’s weak commercial performance in the China mainland market + its poor reputation there for violating copyright laws re local writers + also its violating pornography restrictions….. nothing to do with supposed ‘human rights’ or hacking or even censorship. The game now is whether Google is going to play ‘cache’ with content to avoid censorship or whether it will accept that Bejing wants the company out of its hair + sending it to Hong Kong is the simplest way of solving the issue – as long as Google complies….. A Chinese business expert warns that Google’s decision to defy the Chinese government’s censorship demands could backfire. Google has announced that users of its Chinese language search engine will be able to access unfiltered online searches from Hong Kong-based servers. Deakin University business lecturer and expert on Chinese business, Mona Chung, says she is not convinced Google can do without China’s estimated 338 million internet users. “I think the message is seriously there for a lot of the Western companies, especially the large companies, to really, really seriously take the message: ‘Sit down, take one step back and think about being a large organisation’,” she said. “The fact that you …
