Google earned lavish praise from a congressional panel for its March 22 decision to discontinue censoring search results in China, while lawmakers harshly condemned Microsoft for continuing the practice. In an unexpected development for the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, Internet domain host site GoDaddy.com announced that it will not be offering new .cn domain registrations in China after the Chinese government issued new requirements for information about registrants.
“There appears to be a recent increase in China’s surveillance and monitoring of the Internet activities of its citizens,” Christine Jones, general counsel for Go Daddy, told a panel consisting of nine senators and nine House members that monitors Chinese human rights. “We didn’t want to act as an agent of the Chinese government. We can’t let them be strong and us be weak all the time. We just have to stop it, and then we’ll start offering .cn domain names again.”
Rep. Chris Smith praised Go Daddy’s actions and called Google’s decision “a remarkable, historic and welcomed action.”
Google search rival Microsoft, meanwhile, wasn’t so popular.
“They [Microsoft] need to get on the right side of human rights rather than enabling tyranny, which they’re doing right now,” Smith said.
Alan Davidson, Google’s director of public policy, called on lawmakers to enact legislation to deal with countries that censor searches and favor local competition over international competitors. “Governments need to develop a full set of new trade rules to address new trade barriers,” Davidson said. “We should continue to look for effective ways to address unfair foreign trade barriers in the online world: to use trade agreements, trade tools and trade diplomacy to promote the free flow of information on the Internet.”
Sen. Byron Dorgan also linked censorship and trade issues.
“China wants to participate in the marketplace of goods but keep the marketplace of ideas outside their country,” Dorgan said. “Only when China respects human rights and allows the free flow of ideas … only then will they be treated as a full member of the international community.”
In a brief exchange with Davidson, Dorgan was clearly disappointed when Davidson refused to disclose what information China censors, citing complex legal reasons.

AI success depends on whether enterprise data is ready, reachable, and close enough to the workloads that need it. In this eSpeaks episode, Dell Technologies’ Vrashank Jain explains why fragmented data, weak metadata, slow pipelines, and poor data locality can stall AI projects before models ever reach production.

In this episode of eSpeaks, Jennifer Margles, Director of Product Management at BMC Software, discusses the transition from traditional job scheduling to the era of the autonomous enterprise.

eSpeaks’ Corey Noles talks with Rob Israch, President of Tipalti, about what it means to lead with Global-First Finance and how companies can build scalable, compliant operations in an increasingly uncertain world. They explore how automation, AI, and integrated platforms are helping finance teams tackle today’s biggest challenges, from cross-border compliance and FX volatility to […]
-
Actualités récentes - Ressources Centres de ressourcesRessources en vedetteLink to The Real AI Power Play: Who Controls Your Enterprise Data Layer?
The Real AI Power Play: Who Controls Your Enterprise Data Layer?IT and data teams were promised that AI would make work easier. Instead, it's created new layers of complexity.Link to Building the Backbone of Agentic AI with Trusted, Context-Rich Data
Building the Backbone of Agentic AI with Trusted, Context-Rich DataIn this 10-minute take video, Reltio Principal Solutions Consultant Guy Vorster explains how organizations can overcome fragmented data challenges to power AI agents.Link to IHG scales real-time, trusted data across global brands
IHG scales real-time, trusted data across global brandsAccelerating time to value while powering data-driven engagementLink to Dell’s Vrashank Jain on Enterprise AI Data Readiness and AI Data Platform Infrastructure
Dell’s Vrashank Jain on Enterprise AI Data Readiness and AI Data Platform InfrastructureAI success depends on whether enterprise data is ready, reachable, and close enough to the workloads that need it. In this eSpeaks episode, Dell Technologies’ Vrashank Jain explains why fragmented data, weak metadata, slow pipelines, and poor data locality can stall AI projects before models ever reach production.
Link to BMC’s Jennifer Margules on Intelligent Enterprise Orchestration
BMC’s Jennifer Margules on Intelligent Enterprise OrchestrationIn this episode of eSpeaks, Jennifer Margles, Director of Product Management at BMC Software, discusses the transition from traditional job scheduling to the era of the autonomous enterprise.
Link to Global-First Finance: Building Scalable, Compliant Operations in an Uncertain World
Global-First Finance: Building Scalable, Compliant Operations in an Uncertain WorldeSpeaks’ Corey Noles talks with Rob Israch, President of Tipalti, about what it means to lead with Global-First Finance and how companies can build scalable, compliant operations in an increasingly uncertain world. They explore how automation, AI, and integrated platforms are helping finance teams tackle today’s biggest challenges, from cross-border compliance and FX volatility to […]
-
Intelligence artificielle -
Vidéo -
Mégadonnées et analyse -
Cloud -
Réseau - Cybersécurité Cybersécurité
- Applications Applications
- Gestion IT Gestion IT
- Stockage Stockage
- Mobile Mobile
- Petites entreprises Petites entreprises
- Développement Développement
- Base de données Base de données
- Serveurs Serveurs
- Android Android
- Apple Apple
- Innovation Innovation
- Matériel informatique Matériel informatique
- Avis Avis
- Moteurs de recherche Moteurs de recherche
- Virtualisation Virtualisation
-
- Blogs Blogs
- Événements Événements