Thursday, February 02, 2006

IT Giants urge U.S. to get involved in China censorship fight

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Who are the IT giants? Google, Yahoo, Microsoft! They recently criticized US. government was supposed not to acquiesce to Chinese censorship rules and instead of that, they thought U.S. government should do something to get China government to loosen up. Here you go to see the Elinor Mills' blog. Quote as follows,

Google, Yahoo, Microsoft urge U.S. to get involved in China censorship fight

February 1, 2006 12:12 PM PST

Google, Yahoo and Microsoft--criticized for acquiescing to Chinese censorship rules--say the U.S. government should be doing more to get China to loosen up.

In lieu of sending executives to appear before a Congressional Human Rights Caucus hearing on Wednesday, the companies sent statements.

"In addition to common action by Internet companies, there is an important role for the United States government to address, in the context of its bilateral government-to-government relationships, the larger issues of free expression and open communication. For example, as a U.S.-based company that deals primarily in information, we have urged the United States government to treat censorship as a barrier to trade," Google's senior policy counsel Andrew McLaughlin wrote in a statement posted on the Google Blog.

Google is discussing industry guidelines for all countries subjecting Internet content to restrictions. It is also continuing its outreach with academic experts, activists and others to discuss the issues.

"While China has made great strides in the past decades, it remains in many ways closed. We are not happy about governmental restrictions on access to information, and we hope that over time, everyone in the world will come to enjoy full access to information. Information and communication technology...has brought Chinese citizens a greater ability to read, discuss, publish and communicate about a wider range of topics, events, and issues than ever before," McLaughlin wrote. "We believe that our continued engagement with China is the best (and perhaps only) way for Google to help bring the tremendous benefits of universal information access to all our users there."

In a separate joint statement, Yahoo and Microsoft had a similar message:

"While we believe that companies have a responsibility to identify appropriate practices in each market in which they do business, we think there is a vital role for government-to-government discussion of the larger issues involved. We urge the United States government to take a leadership role in this regard and have initiated a dialogue with relevant U.S. officials to encourage such government-to-government engagement," the statement said.

They also said they were actively exploring potential approaches to guide industry practices and defended their actions.

"We do not consider the Internet situation in China to be one of 'business-as usual.' Beyond commercial considerations, we believe that our services have promoted personal expression and enabled far wider access to independent sources of information for hundreds of millions of individuals in China and elsewhere in the world," the statement said.

Although the companies have been criticized for abiding by Chinese censorship restrictions over the past few years, the debate heated up last week when Google launched its censored Chinese search engine, the last of the major search companies to do so.

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My experience to use the Lektora

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Please allow me introduce the nice machine called Lektora which enable you to post your blog so fast after you reading something. It bridge the RSS feeds and your posting blogs easily. 

Lektora Version 1.5 Released - RSS and blogging unite

Lektora and Qumana have taken a step forward - together. Today marks a revolution in the world of RSS and blogging.


Today's release of the free RSS aggregator / reader Lektora seamlessly integrates RSS reading with blog publishing. The power of Qumana is placed right into the Lektora tool bar above each displayed feed - one click is all it takes to start a post. 


This integration bridges the worlds of RSS and blogging in a unique and seamless way.  It makes browsing and blogging easier than reading a newspaper and clipping articles


Stitch together the ways you browse and read your incoming feeds of information and how you create and edit outgoing blog posts with the elegance and ease of one click.


Lektora displays RSS feeds in an easy-to-read format. Combine that with Qumana's simple and sophisticated blog editing and publishing right in the toolbar, one click unifies the process of :



  • browsing through RSS feeds,
  • finding something interesting, and
  • writing and publishing a new item.

This gives users a more seamless experience, not just for workflow but for aligning the thought process of browsing and reading. And it gives the user a more powerful tool to quickly post well-crafted, nice looking articles to a wide range of blog platforms, email and for saving as documents.


Lektora and Qumana joined together offers MS Word-like publishing capabilities (for one or more blogs), email posting and document creation... right at the end of your RSS feeds.


The integration also makes it easier for bloggers to make money from blogging. Start your post in Lektora, edit it in Qumana and use the built-in feature to drop in an AdGenta ad with one-click.


Your desktop client version of Qumana is always there... just drag 'n drop, double-click, and your next post is on its way. The integration of Qumana and Lektora is for PC users only... for now.


Today's release of Lektora 1.5 is compatible with Firefox 1.5.



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Where is Canada's Web 2.0? B.C., of course!

"Where is Canada's Web 2.0? B.C., of course!"?
Does this blog mean I have to move to BC otherwise I can't find Web 2.0 Job? I quote the blog here:
"Kicked off by Om Malik talking about SanFran being a Web 2.0 centre, Mathew Ingram wondered if Canada was missing the Web 2.0 boat ... hardly!  I think Mark Evans would agree with me that Canada is doing a lot for Web 2.0 and where?  Here in Southern B.C of course!"

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