logo       

Re: Microsoft helps China to censor bloggers: msg#00070

culture.india.sarai.reader

Subject: Re: Microsoft helps China to censor bloggers

There has been much commentin the western media about Microsoft 'caving in' to Chines government pressure and someabout how Google, Yahoo etc aree not averse to suspending international law in order to get a toehold in the Chinese market. This misses the larger point that Microsoft has made a strategic decision to line up with states in the struggle for democracy on the internet.

India offers an equally compelling, but more decentralized case study of the samething. Thousands of decisions are being made at every level of government and society there to install the software and machines that will establish Indian standards for decades to come. The main competitors are Microsoft and Linux (represented by its own commercial corporations such as Red Hat Linux). The latter promote their software by stressing that it is cheaper, more robust and flexible than Windows. Bill Gates, on the other hand, emphasizes Microsoft’s track record of collaboration with government bureaucracy in regulating access to the internet.

The point is that the corporate model of capitalism, inaugurated in the late nineteenth century and brought to its climax in the so-called 'neo-liberal' world economy today, rests on legal collaboration between states and corporations to subject people everywhere to a system of command and control from the top. The main issue is how do you force people to pay up within a generalized system of private property brought to this stage of monopoly? China is really a boon for democrats since it makes clear what the stakes are in a way that is not so obvious in India, for example. And the old men in Beijing are likely to lose in the not so long run.

Keith


<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
Google Custom Search

News | FAQ | advertise