Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey hits at Google for `picking fight'

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turkey hits at Google for `picking fight'

    Turkey hits at Google for `picking fight'

    Financial Times, UK

    By Delphine Strauss in Ankara
    June 24 2010 22:46

    Turkey's communications minister on Thursday hit at Google for
    `picking a fight' with the Turkish state, as he responded to growing
    criticism of web censorship that includes a long-standing ban on
    Google's YouTube subsidiary.

    Ankara insists that the online video-sharing site must open offices in
    Turkey and register for tax purposes before it can expect any help in
    reversing court bans that have kept the site officially off-limits for
    Turkish users for more than two years.

    EDITOR'S CHOICE
    Droid takes on iPhone 4 - Jun-23.Viacom loses $1bn copyright case to
    YouTube - Jun-24.Wireless data blow for Google - Jun-22.US states
    query Google's Street View data - Jun-17.Google shadow over new media
    groups - Jun-16.Google eyes Demand Media's way with words -
    Jun-16..`This site has entered a fight with the Turkish Republic, but
    Turkey will not accept this,' Binali Yildirim, minister for transport
    and communications, told opposition deputies who questioned the
    policy.

    `In many countries this sharing site registers local sales, in Turkey
    it doesn't.'

    Mr Yildirim has been attacking Google for weeks, but Thursday's
    language is by far the strongest he has used.

    Google did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    But the attack follows a wave of complaints from Turkish web-users
    after state efforts to enforce the ban more rigorously earlier this
    month inadvertently disrupted other Google services, including some
    that web businesses relied on.

    YouTube's pariah status in Turkey stems not from its tax arrangements,
    but from a law passed in 2007 giving judges power to ban websites that
    insulted Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the modern state's architect.

    YouTube fell foul of the judges on this count after Turkish and Greek
    nationalists posted a series of abusive videos. The law also banned
    sites that it said incited suicide, drug use, paedophilia, immorality
    and illegal prostitution.

    Turkish web-users have long found ways to circumvent the ban, and
    YouTube regularly scores among the 10 most-visited sites in the
    country.

    Temporary bans have affected many other sites, including the blogging
    platform Wordpress and the trading site Alibaba.com, and the issue of
    web censorship is breeding both bitter criticism and inventive parody.

    One such parodist is the website millimotor.com - which translates
    roughly as `national engine' - which pokes fun at Turkish nationalism
    in general and ministers' calls for a national search engine to rival
    Google in particular.

    Type `Kurdish culture' into millimotor, and it suggests a link to
    Ataturk's address to youth. Type the Turkish for `Armenian genocide',
    and it responds: `Did you mean the so-called Armenian genocide?'




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X