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More power to Google for its civil disobedience in China. Why does US-backed rival Baidu.com get a free ride?

January 14, 2010 by  
Filed under Commentary, News & Opinion, Uncategorized

BY PETER SCHEER—It’s not every day that a public corporation engages in what amounts to civil disobedience. But that, in effect, is what Google has done in halting censorship of search results on Google.cn–the Chinese language version of Google that is available inside China–in defiance of China’s laws.

More power to Google. Its unilateral action, coupled with the threat to withdraw from the country if necessary, creates an awkward situation for Chinese officials. However, the impact would be vastly greater if China’s government faced, not just one internet search engine determined to reject censorship, but a united front consisting of both Google, the number 2 player in the Chinese market (with a 36% share), and Baidu, the leading search engine (with a 58% market share).

Baidu is often described in the press as China’s “home-grown” internet portal and search service, as though its native parentage somehow explains the company’s reported pliancy in acquiescing to government censorship demands. In fact, however, Baidu’s financing is as American as the dot-coms of Internet 1.0.

Baidu received its initial funding from American venture capital firms, including Draper Fisher Jurvetson and IDG Technology Venture. (Google itself was an early-stage investor, but sold off its interest in Baidu as it was deciding to expand into the Chinese market). Baidu was taken public by American investment banks and law firms. Its stock (symbol: BIDU) trades on the NASDAQ exchange. And it is today majority-owned by institutional investors with names like Fidelity and Morgan Stanley.

Not surprisingly, Baidu’s stock rose sharply on news of its competitor’s confrontation with Chinese government authorities.(Google’s stock declined, but not much). Baidu’s American investors will reap a windfall if, as seems plausible, Baidu soon finds itself a monopolist in the business of internet search in the world’s biggest internet market. But should they?

From a traditional business standpoint, the answer is clearly yes. But from a standpoint that assigns a high value to corporate integrity, Google’s action may reveal a better strategic path. A Baidu that has ambitions beyond China’s borders could have greater long-term value if it is not seen as doing the bidding of China’s bureaucrats.

While online reaction to Google’s announcement ranges from digital hallelujahs to the criticism that Google should have stood up to China long ago, Baidu and its American investors get a free ride. This is puzzling, especially since inaction by Baidu is not merely a position of neutrality, but greatly strengthens the government’s hand in its dealings with Google.

Imagine an alternate scenario in which, say, Silicon Valley VC Bill Draper, whose firm once owned as much as 28% of Baidu, organizes major US investors to pressure Baidu’s Board to stand together with Google against China’s censors. That would be extraordinary—corporate civil disobedience squared.

China in that scenario would face a most unpleasant choice: To allow its walled-off version of the internet to lose much of its value as essential infrastructure for economic development; or, to give up substantial control over what its citizens can, and cannot, see.

Baidu should follow Google’s example. But don’t hold your breath.
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Peter Scheer, a lawyer and journalist, is executive director of the First Amendment Coalition, a nonprofit advocating free speech and government transparency. FAC has petitioned the US Trade Representative to use international treaties to curtail China’s censorship of the internet.

One Response to “More power to Google for its civil disobedience in China. Why does US-backed rival Baidu.com get a free ride?”

  1. Jeroen Hellingman says:

    What has come from Google’s point that Chinese censorship is in effect an illegal restraint of trade, and what options are available under WTO treaties to get countermeasures implemented against Chinese trade to compensate it for the losses it thus incurs.

    What options does the US Government have to coerce Baidu into either leaving China or not implementing Chinese censorship laws — similarly as the US and the EU fight each other with boycott and anti-boycott legislation regarding Cuba, and makes it illegal for US companies to cooperate with anti-Israel boycotts in the Arab world.

    (Except that the US basically applies double standards, as it also uses means to censor the internet, however, using more indirect means, such as using copyright legislation for censorship, something which for example during the Iraq war made it very difficult to follow certain foreign news media on the events, requiring me to use proxy servers.)

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