google 撤出中国, 对谁有好处?

一台戏,那么容易唱好么。什么角色都得有人唱,还得各唱各的调,才好听。
您说的是,不过关键是“和谐”,调可以不同但也得能调和起来才好听,还是和谐压倒一起啊。
 
http : // news. back china . com/2010/1/20/gb2312_73458.html

:D:D
村长老大, CFC为什么过滤 back_china.com呢? 以前有人倒过乱吗?

俺吓猜,莫不是遵守加拿大的法规法律?
 
文章看了,讲的是政府网军
思路不一样。俺想的是堡垒从内部攻破
如果古沟内部,呵呵,有线人,事情就完全不同了,有源代码,还有什么秘密?
 
It has not been good for Google, it looks like.
 

附件

  • Image1.gif
    Image1.gif
    14.2 KB · 查看: 88
I plan to take some in when it reaches the low of this wave, which by the way will be my first ever investment in stocks. Please kindly remind me of the trend of this particular stock. Let's see how it goes one year from now.
 
I plan to take some in when it reaches the low of this wave, which by the way will be my first ever investment in stocks. Please kindly remind me of the trend of this particular stock. Let's see how it goes one year from now.

It could be a pretty good investment.

It is curretnly traded at US$543.84, down $5.15 from yesterday, with 52-week high at $629.51 and 52-week low at $336.05.

5,000+ shares could make you a millionare in a year.

However, I do NOT recommend it. Do it at your own risk. :p:D

http://www.advfn.com/p.php?pid=qkchart&symbol=N^GOOG
 

附件

  • Image3.gif
    Image3.gif
    14 KB · 查看: 77
输家是谷沟好理解,说古沟失去信任怎么个说法呀?
A.用户失去信任,他家安全性值得忧虑,他家的email server 给人hack,他家一点办法没有只能撤。你说他将来搞云计算,大家的艳照放在云端能放心吗?
B.失去商家信任,他家说撤就撤,在他家发广告可是他家的服务时有时无,那钱不跟打了水飘一样?浪费钱不说还耽误事儿,对吧?
C.失去政府信任,这不是明摆着挑战天朝政府的主权吗?打个比方,您家开party,Bob不请自到,您告Bob女士上楼上,小孩去basement,大老爷们儿在main lever,玩儿了半天了,Bob突然觉得不爽了,觉得您这是性别歧视阿,然后跟您那儿较劲,非得让楼上的女士下来或者他上去,您不答应,Bob就气哼哼地走了。下回您再开party,Bob一来您是不是得防着点儿:这B不是来party的,是来找碴儿的?您猜怎么着?大伙都管Bob叫SB,而我们管Bob叫古狗。
D.失去股东信任,这管理层不顾生意整天忙着意识形态的东西,那他就该去国会阿,开公司没这样开的,对吧?
E.失去中国网民信任,本来用得好好的,现在服务时有时无,试一下baidu/sohu/bing吧,一试,诶,效果还挺好,慢慢就忘了还有google这回事儿了。别看现在有些个“不明真相”的网民现在想不通,慢慢大伙儿就忘了。您还记得您太姥姥吗?他古狗有您太姥姥亲吗?要是3年内古狗舔着脸回来,估计还有一部分人记得他,再往后大伙就得问了,古狗是谁?
 
因为昨晚在这里挂上了几个贴子,白天在浏览新闻时到特别关注有关Google的商业消息。在The Globe and Mail上的business版看到一篇,觉得分析的还是挺全面的,所以想到转贴到这里。但在上The G and M 网的时候,却看到关于interview Google‘s co-founder Sergey Brin 的一段消息,遂转贴如下。

Why Brin wanted out of China

Google Inc. co-founder Sergey Brin says China is reminiscent of the Soviet Union that his family fled when he was just six years old. Mr. Brin, 36, recalls in an interview with the Wall Street Journal how police came to his home and how his father was a target of anti-Semitism. In the remarkable interview, posted online on the newspaper's site, Mr. Brin says those memories bolstered his opinions on Google's operations in China. He cites China's Web censorship and meddling in the company's affairs, adding that the cyberattack cited by Google was “the straw that broke the camel's back.” The newspaper says Mr. Brin and other Google officials won out over some who believed Google should stay in China. It announced this week it would no longer censor and routed its China traffic through Hong Kong. While China has made huge strides in some areas such as poverty, he tells the newspaper, “nevertheless, in some aspects of their policy, particularly with respect to censorship, with respect to surveillance of dissidents, I see the same earmarks of totalitarianism, and I find that personally quite troubling.”

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/repo...ey-brin-of-life-under-soviets/article1510918/
 
刚刚因为搜索The G and M 的文章,看到下面这个消息,所以post在这里增加LZ帖子的魅力。

GoDaddy to stop registering domains in China

March 24, 2010 12:07 PM PDT

by Tom Krazit

At least one company is ready to follow Google's stance on doing business in China: GoDaddy.

During a congressional hearing later today to discuss Internet freedom and China, GoDaddy executives plan to announce that they will stop registering domain names in China in response to a new government policy that requires extensive information about registrants, according to The Washington Post. Starting last December, individuals and businesses that wished to register a .cn domain name were being asked to submit a photograph of themselves as well as a serial number identifying their business license in China.

"This is the first time a registry has asked us to retroactively obtain additional verification and documentation of individuals who have registered a domain name through our company," Christine Jones, general counsel at GoDaddy, said in a copy of her prepared remarks provided by GoDaddy. The company will continue to manage existing registrations but will no longer offer new .cn domain names, she said.

Jones also told the committee that GoDaddy has faced increased numbers of DDoS (Distributed Denial of Service) attacks since the beginning of the year. "In the first three months of this year, we have repelled dozens of extremely serious DDoS attacks that appear to have originated in China, based on the IP addresses from which the attacks derived. Had our security systems not countered these attacks, the result would have been a widespread take-down of our customers' hosted Web sites," Jones said in her prepared testimony.

Google's Alan Davidson, director of public policy, also plans to speak before the hearing, coming two days after Google announced its decision to move its Chinese-language search engine from mainland China to Hong Kong in order to bypass government laws on Internet censorship.

"Internet censorship is a challenge that no particular industry--much less any single company--can tackle on its own," Davidson plans to say during his testimony, according to a copy of his prepared remarks posted on Google's public policy blog. "However, we believe concerted, collective action by governments, companies and individuals can help promote online free expression and reduce the impact of censorship."

For the most part, U.S. companies have reiterated plans to stay in China and adhere to their laws following Google's initial announcement in January and subsequent moves this week. Earlier this year, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urged companies to do their part in pressuring governments to open up the Internet to their citizens, but many companies feel the issue is much more properly dealt with at the national level, according to trade group representatives.

http://news.cnet.com/8301-30684_3-20001095-265.html
 
后退
顶部