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Chinese dissident slams Internet companies
A respected Chinese dissident has warned that the capitulation of Western Internet companies to China's authorities is a more serious threat to free speech in the country than the Chinese government's filtering of what its citizens can access on the Internet.Free IT resource
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Speaking in Tokyo Monday, Wei Jingsheng, singled out Yahoo for its part in revealing information that helped land a journalist in jail in 2004.
"Let me specify Yahoo," he said at the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan. "They will track down Internet users and help to sentence them. This really threatens the safety of Internet writers in China."
Yahoo has been the target of criticism since just over a year ago, when it admitted providing authorities with evidence that helped land a local journalist a 10-year jail sentence.
The journalist, Shi Tao, was an editorial department head at the Contemporary Business News in China's Hunan Province. He was arrested in 2004 after sending an e-mail to a New York-based Web site advocating democracy in China.
The e-mail contained information regarding a Chinese government warning for its officials, urging them to be vigilant ahead of the 15th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre and to watch out for dissident activity. It was posted on the site under the alias 198964, the date Beijing crushed the student-led democracy movement, June 4, 1989.
With the information provided by Yahoo, Shi was arrested and convicted of divulging state secrets by a provincial court in April 2004, according to information from several sources, including Reporters Without Borders.
In its defense, Yahoo said at the time that it was just following local laws in handing over the information.



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