Members of Congress and democratic rights organizations worldwide have condemned the companies for supplying personal information to authoritarian governments.
Yahoo, in particular, faced questioning by Congress last year for surrendering emails that led to the imprisonment of Chinese dissidents.
The new code, titled the Global Network Initiative, comprises a set of principles drafted over the past two years. They undertake to . . .
- Protect the personal information of their users wherever they do business;
- "Narrowly interpret and implement government demands that compromise privacy," as defined by the code;
- Scrutinize a country's track record of jeopardizing personal information and freedom of expression before launching new businesses in that country;
- Discuss all such risks widely with executives and board members of a signatory company.
While Yahoo ceo Jerry Yang [in what might be a valedictory message] hailed the new principles as "a valuable roadmap that will help ensure that technology and the internet continue to help improve people's lives".
But dissenting voices say the code does not go far enough. "More serious questions have to be asked about [a participating] company's legal obligations," argues Morton Sklar, US executive director of theWorld Organization for Human Rights.
Sklar wants the code to address whether internet companies are violating US or international laws by complying with requests from certain governments.
Data sourced by WARC from Wall Street Journal Online; additional content by WARC staff, 29 October 2008
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