From: www.itworld.com

WEB 2.0: Semel defends actions in Chinese journalist case

October 6, 2005 —

 

Yahoo Inc.'s chairman and chief executive officer Terry Semel strongly defended the company's decision to turn over evidence to Chinese authorities that helped the government convict a local journalist and send him to jail for 10 years.

Companies that do business internationally have to respect and abide by the laws of the countries in which they operate, whether that be China or any other country, he said Thursday at the Web 2.0 Conference in San Francisco.

"I don't think there is a publication in the world who also publishes in China, who doesn't observe the laws of China," he said in a session in which he answered questions from conference chair John Battelle and from the audience. "And I wouldn't confine it to China per se."

Acknowledging that "it's both a moral and legal issue" and that sometimes "on a personal level, I wince," Semel said that companies such as Yahoo have to either respect local laws or exit the country in question. If American companies opt to not do business in a country with whose laws they don't agree with may, that may hold back progress towards greater freedom in that country, he said.

"I've always taken the attitude that you're better off playing by the government's rules and getting there," he said. "Part of our role in any form of media is to get whatever we can into those countries and to show and to enable people, slowly, to see the Western way and what our culture is like, and to learn."

He also acknowledged that China is a very important market for his company because of its sheer size in terms of Internet, PC and wireless device users. Yahoo has invested heavily in China in recent years, including US$1 billion this year to buy a stake in China-based Alibaba.com Corp. and $120 million in 2003 to buy Hong Kong-based 3721 Network Software.

In September, press advocacy group Reporters Without Borders blasted Yahoo, saying the Sunnyvale, California, company had provided e-mail from journalist Shi Tao's private Yahoo account as evidence in a trial in which he was convicted of divulging state secrets to foreigners.

"We already knew that Yahoo collaborates enthusiastically with the Chinese regime in questions of censorship, and now we know it is a Chinese police informant as well,