Google To France: No You Don't Get To Censor The Global Internet
from the well-this-could-get-interesting dept
As we’ve been covering here at Techdirt, French regulators have been pushing Google to censor the global internet whenever it receives “right to be forgotten” requests. If you don’t recall, two years ago, there was a dangerous ruling in the EU that effectively said that people could demand Google remove certain links from showing up when people searched on their names. This “right to be forgotten” is now being abused by a ton of people trying to hide true information they just don’t like being known. Google grudgingly has agreed to this, having little choice to do otherwise. But it initially did so only on Google’s EU domain searches. Last year, a French regulator said that it needed to apply globally. Google said no, explaining why this was a “troubling development that risks serious chilling effects on the web.”
French regulators responded with “don’t care, do it!” Google tried to appease the French regulators earlier this year with a small change where even if you went to Google.com, say, from France (rather than the default of Google.fr), Google would still censor the links based on your IP address. And, again, the French regulators said not good enough, and told Google it needed to censor globally. It also issued a fine.
As we noted at the time, Google immediately said it planned to appeal and that’s now officially in motion, as was explained in a writeup on Google’s own blog (and was also published in France’s Le Monde newspaper).
As a matter of both law and principle, we disagree with this demand. We comply with the laws of the countries in which we operate. But if French law applies globally, how long will it be until other countries – perhaps less open and democratic – start demanding that their laws regulating information likewise have global reach? This order could lead to a global race to the bottom, harming access to information that is perfectly lawful to view in one?s own country. For example, this could prevent French citizens from seeing content that is perfectly legal in France. This is not just a hypothetical concern. We have received demands from governments to remove content globally on various grounds — and we have resisted, even if that has sometimes led to the blocking of our services.
This is a big, big deal for how the global internet will function. Giving the most censorious and autocratic countries veto powers over the global internet should obviously raise serious concerns among everyone — even those among you who hate or fear Google.
Filed Under: borders, censorship, france, free speech, internet, jurisdiction, right to be forgotten
Companies: google
Comments on “Google To France: No You Don't Get To Censor The Global Internet”
In a completely unrelated incident, 100 French tax officials storm Google’s Paris HQ
http://www.bbc.com/news/business-36370628
Re: Rattling the saber in one hand, holding the 'donations' box with the other
The tax arrangements of international companies have come under close scrutiny recently.
Several have been accused of using legal methods to minimise their tax bills.
In Google’s case, its tax structure allows it to pay tax in the Republic of Ireland, even when sales appear to relate to the UK.
If the governments actually cared about companies pulling stunts like that they could simply close the loopholes in the tax code that allow large companies(Google or otherwise) to shift taxes to wherever it’s cheapest, but given that would step on the toes of those that buy the politicians I don’t imagine much will come of it except some of the large companies having to pay a little extra as ‘compensation’. Can’t upset the bosses after all.
Google should route all of France’s traffic to their search engine through the Great Firewall of China and see how they like global censorship when it’s not France calling the shots.
Google seems to think that France has a problem with global censorship. Many of the governments would be just fine with other nations censoring the internet if they get to do it.
They’re certainly much more afraid of what their own citizens will find out about their own governments than what their citizens will have censored by other governments.
Curious how Microsoft is handling this with their Bing search engine?
This issue becomes less abstract for Americans if a search engine is filtering American search results based on the dictates of French regulators. Such an action would be unacceptable.
Hi Google? I’d like Tiananmen Square to be forgotten worldwide. k.Tx.bye – China.
It goes further than that
“For example, this could prevent French citizens from seeing content that is perfectly legal in France.”
There are things France (and others) do as a nation that would be criminal acts in the United States. For example, displaying Nazi symbols or denying the holocaust are illegal in many Western European nations, but are protected speech under US law.
This means that, in theory, someone could sue France in a US federal court for civil/constitutional rights violations. If French law can reach into other countries, then US law can reach into France.
But it goes even further still. Anything you can sue for and win under 42 USC 1983 is also a criminal act under 18 USC 241 & 242. Winning a civil lawsuit for rights violation generates enough probable cause for a grand jury indictment and extradition to stand trial on criminal charges.
I wonder how the President of France would feel about being unable to enter the US or any country we have an extradition treaty with under penalty of immediate arrest for a crime punishable by 10 years to life in prison?
Re: It goes further than that
Re: Re: It goes further than that
But don’t dare running a cyberlocker…
Re: It goes further than that
The US has an extradition treaty with France so that could be interesting.
Re: Re: It goes further than that
No doubt Britain Germany and Italy do too. But you don’t see American officials being extradited there over kidnapping and torture, and so you won’t see American officials extradited over a mere search engine squabble.
Google has the option of not doing business in France. It can still run a French-language search engine and charge for advertising in other countries. But with no office or business in France itself, it would be beyond the reach of any French court decisions.
Google, quit complaining and do something.
Turn off all Google service for requests originating from French IPs & instead display a page informing users that the government of France fails at the internet and is deliberately trying to restrict their access to information.
See how long it takes for the politicians to cave.
$100 says it won’t take more than 48 hours.
Re: Google, quit complaining and do something.
Yep, I completely agree.
Re: Google, quit complaining and do something.
While I agree, wouldn’t this indicate that the french government has SUCCEEDED at restricting the citizens’ access to information?
Re: Re: Google, quit complaining and do something.
Absolutely, which is highly unlikely to be the will of the French citizenry, so it won’t take long until the citizens encourage their government to reconsider – perhaps at the end of a pointy stick. Remember, France isn’t really known to maintain a particularly stable government anyway, being that they are already on their Fifth Republic. Unlike the United States, it’s citizens don’t mind watering the tree of liberty.
So consider, which is worse? 1) A very brief restriction on a relatively few people (who could still bypass the restriction via TOR, VPN or similar means) to prevent similar stupid ideas from popping up all over the globe in what are supposed to be free nations, or 2) continued capitulation and appeasement while ‘working through the system’ and hoping this fire wont spread.
Google (and any other provider in a similar position) needs to demonstrate that they stand for internet freedom, and will not support or conduct business in nations whose policies are anathema to this principle.
Re: Re: Re: Google, quit complaining and do something.
It would be interesting if Google set up a hidden service, like DuckDuckGo and Facebook, so they couldn’t know where the users are located. But for now, their search engine (and some other Google services) block most Tor users.
Re: Re: Google, quit complaining and do something.
The point is making it very obvious to the French Public and causing them to take their displeasure to their government.
Re: Google, quit complaining and do something.
Please, Google, let France exercise the right to be forgotten and simply abandon that nutter land.
Re: Google, quit complaining and do something.
…and add an automatic redirect to yahoo search after 30 seconds.
Re: Re: Google, quit complaining and do something.
Now that’s just cruel and unusual punishment.
Re: Google, quit complaining and do something.
Nice idea. However, the German publishers demonstrate what’s gonna happen then in their fight for the “Leistungsschutzrecht”: sue Google for abusing their dominant market position.
Re: Google, quit complaining and do something.
How about shutting down Android too?
Dear Google
Dear Google,
Your position on not letting France censor the global internet is not acceptable.
I don’t think you have thought this through. You don’t seem to understand what this will lead to.
If this policy is allowed to stand, then it will set a precedent that no other countries can censor the internet.
Before long, no country will be allowed to censor the global internet.
Please reconsider
For the Censors!
Re: Dear Google
The governments would come to an agreement that the official publishers are allowed to publish on the Internet, but that the people are not. Also all governments can control their part of the Internet at their borders, which would be easy with only a limited number of publishers, and would also removes the peoples ability to organize themselves on a large a scale.
Re: Re: Dear Google
So then, a License To Publish.
Dear France
Dear France
Please, please, for the love of God, please nationally invoke your nation’s right to be forgotten!
The rest of us will thank you for it.
Re: Dear France, nerd harder!
“Please, please, for the love of God, please nationally invoke your nation’s right to be forgotten!”
Germany tried to assist them with that a few times as I recall.
My expectation is this is likely state protectionism aimed at some local French search engine providers. They are making a childish argument, and anyone in their own I.T. department would tell them so. So either they are the children they appear to be, or this is some sort of bizarre gambit.
Really this can be sorted out quite quickly. Google can just take all of France out of their routing table for a day or two and watch half of France crash. The search engine is small potatoes at this point. The portable java they have out there, gmail, youtube etc. Frances economy would grind to a halt.
Maybe that is what they are pissed about. There is of course a solution… Hey France! Nerd harder!
Google, quit complaining and do something.
Just don’t bother indexing French media. Hit ’em in the wallet.
France has just become the frontrunner....
as the most dangerous country in the world.
Google is not the internet, but if it happens to Google, then it will happen to all others as well.
They are going to screw with what is basicly the history book of the world…. and they just don’t care.
What I don’t understand is why there aren’t protests in the streets or why heads haven’t rolled yet? This is the most insane, craptastic, unfathomable, unforgivable, mindnumbingly stupid decisions ANYONE written about on Techdirt has ever made!
Just the suggestion of something like this should prove to anyone that the person simply aren’t fit for any job requiring descisionmaking and should be thrown out faster than you can say “monkeybrains”.
Whether or not, you use or like the internet, the fact is that it is the oppotunity for us all to learn about everything and each other which I see as the best way we have for preventing wars and suffering.
It is the greatest library in the world, but without an index it is worthless.
That makes France’s descision not only dangerous, but also incridibly evil.
I would be ashamed if that had come from someone in my country.
I wonder how long it will be before French users of the internet start reacting the way Chinese users have… with VPN and TOR.
Dear France,
I have a solution to your problem. Build your own version of the internet or build your own firewall.
Thanks,
Signed the rest of the free world.
Re: Re:
not much of a free world these days. More and more formerly Free countries are allowing themselves to be turned into police states or petty dictatorships.
To Google. From: AdolfH.
There’s a right to be forgotten? Really? No one told me about it. Please sign me up for your informative newsletter ASAP.
Also, it seems there are one or two or maybe more disheartening things about me — please make them all go away.
After all, if you don’t remember it and can’t read about it, it didn’t happen: right?
Dear Google
I would like to submit a “right to be forgotten” request. Please forget France.
Thank you.
Right To Be Forgotten == 1984 Ministry Of Truth
Wasn’t Winston’s job to destroy all records of persons and events as directed by the party?
Of course this demand places Google on a bad position. Not complying is likely going to cost them heavily in France. However, complying makes them open to being sued in the US for blocking legal content and taking ng a massive PR hit as well.
Re: Re:
Of course this demand places Google on a bad position. Not complying is likely going to cost them heavily in France. However, complying makes them open to being sued in the US for blocking legal content and taking ng a massive PR hit as well.
Isn’t Google its own worst PR team? Well, that’s what I thought, anyway..
Au Revoir google.fr
C’est la vie!
Block everything
China or North Korea would ask Google to block Google, Facebook, Twitter etc. The French government can be really pigheaded sometimes. I suspect that this has more to do this beating down Google so that an EU competitor can “compete”, than it has to do with protecting people from their past.
Re: Block everything
The EU has competitive search engines? I thought they only had lawyers.
Re: Re: Block everything
I think this is the real intention here. Taken together with the ruling that EU and US data transfer agreement doesn’t comply with European human rights law, I’d theorise that the ultimate aim is to make it illegal (in Europe) for non-European companies to index the European web.
A race to the bottom?
France is already there.
France to Google...
Nerd Harder.
What it's REALLY about...
Sheesh, you think that they’d take Lance cheating a little better, now, wouldn’t you? You’ve revoked his medals… let it go.
Techdirt, unless that dirt is critical of Google or Facebook, in which case Mike Masnick will repeat what his masters say like a good little parrot.
Re: Re:
Your post is in violation of a law of a country. Based on the application of international jurisdiction, you have been found guilty.
Have a DMCA vote.
Re: Re:
Yeees because if this happens Google will so get what is coming to them. It is not like it will be used for other seaarchengines as well or the public will suffer when it will be pratically impossible to find anything on the internet.
But who cares? It is Google so all that matters is that they go down.
Oh wait… you didn’t actually read what this was about? You just saw the word “Google” and everything went red? Almost like a bull doing some… what is the bull word for parroting?… lets just go with bullying.
Re: Re: Re:
Still, I would rather be ‘used’ by Google than ‘sued’ by Google.. see what I did there? I switched the ‘u’ and ‘s’ around and made a funny!
Re: Re:
I was wondering when the “but but but Google” bots would be out.
Re: Re:
Not everybody’s a compliant little cocksucker like you with no sense of reading comprehension.
good lord. who does france think it is, the u.s.?
Yes, I also agree with you. I was pondering when the “but Google” bots would be out.
To webhost-- number the "anonymous cowards"?
Some “anonymous cowards” make valid contributions, but others are annoying trolls. Would it be possible to assign them sequential numbers in each thread (eg “ac-1”, “ac-2”, etc, to make it easy for others to reference their comments? Even better would be for them to keep the same number is for subsequent comments in the same thread, but that may be more trouble than it is worth.
Re: To webhost-- number the "anonymous cowards"?
Some “anonymous cowards” make valid… more trouble than it is worth.
May I make a suggestation?!
Just rate the trolls.. Good Troll/ Bad Troll/ Great Troll.. Which is what we all aspire to be^
Only Congress has strength to protect US free speech.
European politicians would like nothing better than for Google to withdraw from their markets, leaving the field to local, politically connected players. If they start working in concert with non-European powers, there will come a point where Google, as a profit-making company, will feel an irresistible economic motivation to bring foreign censorship to America.
(#2) Only Congress has the power to stop this, by proclaiming that domestic free speech is a non-negotiable core value of our country, and giving the requisite six month notice that none our foreign trade agreements can prevent us from applying economic sanctions to uphold domestic free speech.
Warning: All hate-mongers
Isn’t it Illegal to hate these monsterous corporations, especially Google?
Again, what about the other search sites
Every time I read a story about someone fighting Google, I have to ask: what about the other search sites? Is France pressuring Bing, Yahoo, and DuckDuckGo the same way? How come no one talks about this? 🙂
Re: Again, what about the other search sites
If Google caves, it will be easy to bring the others in line, at least the ones with commercial significance.
Re: Re: Again, what about the other search sites
Google should reroute any relevant links through Bing (and others) and see how long it takes them to get sued by the mad frogs. I’d like to see France cope with pissing off both Google and Microsoft…
Great article to follow.