We once scorned the idea the Internet could be censored. Many politicians have tried to stop porn, but always to no avail. Spam still pours in our in-boxes, and the net is increasingly susceptible to viruses and "mal-ware."
Despite the tough-talkin' rhetoric and angry hand-wringing of authorities, there are very few actual limits to what people can do online. Even in its more restricted forms, the net fosters an array of features that enable free expression.
This means the recent attack by human-rights activists and some legislators on
These firms—under fire for "censoring" search results and blocking some Web logs at the behest of Chinese censors—provide services that foster anonymous communications.
Leaving
For those who have Web access, there often are ways around government restrictions. "Hacktivists" worldwide already provide escape hatches from Chinese government censorship.
The Web, given its architecture, is famous for routing around censorship as if it were a physical disruption. Morally and technologically, staying put and fighting for change—not pulling out—is the right course of action.
Compulsory blocking of Web sites does not outweigh the profound good tech firms can otherwise do in
Blame must lie with Chinese censors. Tech firms want to promote information, and have no inherent interest in censoring information they profit by providing. The presence of
Economic freedom—here, the fostering of peer networking and individual broadcasting—facilitates political freedom.
Even in the West, the graphical Web is relatively new. It would be foolish to fight so hard to achieve the current unprecedented levels of free speech in
Companies need to be relentless rather than apologetic, because the tides of morality, technology and history are on their side. More international companies in
The fact
Companies can't fight it alone. They need to team up to refuse, and the
Google's oft-derided slogan is "Don't be Evil"; in this case, it's living up to that credo. Google, Microsoft and other firms are not violating rights—instead they are doing more than nearly anyone else to assure the Chinese of tomorrow enjoy full individual rights. Technology firms are not to blame for the failings of a foreign government; the moral outrage belongs with Chinese censors.

