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Government law enforcement: 30,000 Internet police
tech-savvy Chinese citizens relied upon proxy servers
1.Focus on people their lives, their work, their dreams.
2.Every millisecond counts.
3.Simplicity is powerful.
4.Engage beginners and attract experts.
5. Dare to innovate.
6.Design for the world.
7.Plan for today's and tomorrow's business.
8.Delight the eye without distracting the mind.
9.Be worthy of people's trust.
10.Add a human touch.
Google’s Philosophy
• Ten Things Google Knows to be True
• Privacy Principals
• User Experience
• Security Philosophy
Google History Facts
• From 2006 to the Present
What others have to say about Google and China
• Lisa Roner – EthicalCorp.com
• Siva Vaidhnyanathan – author of “The Googlization of Everything”
Environment and Precedent
• Business Roundtable Institute for Corporate Ethic
• The Atlantic Monthly
My Conclusion Based on the Evidence
How Google may open up the doors of Access to Information in China.
by: Ernest Rando
1. Use information to provide our users with valuable products and services.
2. Develop products that reflect strong privacy standards and practices.
3. Make the collection of personal information transparent.
4. Give users meaningful choices to protect their privacy.
5. Be a responsible steward of the information we hold.
•We've learned that when security is done right, it's done as a community
1.Focus on the user and all else will follow.
2.It's best to do one thing really, really well.
3.Fast is better than slow.
4.Democracy on the web works.
5.You don't need to be at your desk to need an answer.
6.You can make money without doing evil.
7.There's always more information out there.
8.The need for information crosses all borders.
9.You can be serious without a suit.
10. Great just isn't good enough.
The State department said that Mrs. Clinton had met with executives from Google and Microsoft, as well as with Cisco Systems, which provides much of China's internet infrastructure, to discuss how to stop countries from "stifling" access to information. Next week the US is to launch a new technology policy to help citizens in other countries to gain access to an uncensored internet.
(1) keeping personal information outside China through Gmail, its Web-based email service, and Blogger, its personal Web-blog-hosting service;
(2) disclosing the presence of general filtering to users; and
(3) continuing a Chinese-language version of Google.com.