Microsoft has changed
its position on blog censorship, insisting that it will
only censor blogs when it receives explicit legal instructions to do so.
The software giant is also changing the
MSN architecture to ensure
that if a blog has to be banned it will still be available outside the censoring
country. Bloggers will also be notified before their blogs are removed.
Microsoft has called on others in the industry to agree a set of principles
to apply to future cases.
"Industry-wide principles are needed. These issues are not limited to any
single company or single country," said a Microsoft spokesman.
"We believe that industry-wide principles are necessary and we support a
dialogue between industry leaders, advocacy groups and governments."
Details of the policy were given in a presentation by Microsoft's top lawyer,
Brad Smith, at the Government Leaders Forum in Lisbon.
The shift follows international outrage over
Microsoft's censorship of one of China's most popular bloggers, including
sharp
criticism from its own staff.
The situation worsened as speculation grew that no legal complaint had been
made by the Chinese authorities, and that staff had been acting on their own
initiative in censoring the blogs.
Microsoft's decision will help improve its public image considerably, since
Google and
Yahoo are still pursuing
policies of voluntary censorship.
The move also raises an interesting legal issue. Article 35 of the
Chinese
constitution states: 'Citizens of the People's Republic of China enjoy
freedom of speech, of the press, of assembly, of association, of procession and
of demonstration.'
It also states: 'Citizens of the People's Republic of China have the right to
criticise and make suggestions to any state organ or functionary. No one may
suppress such complaints, charges and exposures, or retaliate against the
citizens making them.'
If Microsoft is going to wait for a legal order to censor then this could
open the door for Chinese citizens to challenge a banning order under the
provisions of the constitution.
"Legally speaking this could happen, but it's unlikely," said Daniel Simons,
legal officer at free expression advocacy group
Article 19.
"This is a very good step forward. But ideally they should be defending the
rights of their customers to operate without censorship."
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