Tag Archive

China Engaged In Total Censorship Campaign Against Google

Published on 2014/06/03 By admin

The cat and mouse game between China, Google and the internet continues. Today and tomorrow are the 25th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre. Fearing another anti-government uprising, every year at this time China cracks down on its citizens’ ability to access information about the..

How Google’s New “Right To Be Forgotten” Form Works: An Explainer

Published on 2014/05/30 By admin

Google has taken a big step forward in complying with the European Union’s new “Right To Be Forgotten” that was established after a court ruling earlier this month.

UK Prime Minister Attacks Google, Bing & Yahoo On Child Porn, Demands Better Efforts By October

Published on 2013/07/22 By admin

UK prime minister David Cameron unveiled a wide-range of efforts today to protect children against pornography on the Internet. A significant part of his speech attacked the search engines of Google, Bing and Yahoo for not doing enough and demanding changes by October. Below is Cameron’s..

World Telecom Conference [WCIT] Full of More Than Meets the Eye Fodder

Published on 2012/12/14 By admin

In the latest from the World Conference on International Telecommunications (WCIT 2012) in Dubai, the US, Canada, and the UK have refused signing a proposed treaty that would give equal governing rights to world states.

World Telecom Conference [WCIT] Full of More Than Meets the Eye Fodder

Published on 2012/12/14 By admin

In the latest from the World Conference on International Telecommunications (WCIT 2012) in Dubai, the US, Canada, and the UK have refused signing a proposed treaty that would give equal governing rights to world states. As we reported earlier, Russia, China, and Saudi Arabia set out to push for dramatic changes to be made to Internet The post World Telecom Conference [WCIT] Full of More Than Meets the Eye Fodder appeared first on Search Engine Journal .

Google Fined $208,000 In Australian Defamation Case, May Appeal

Published on 2012/11/12 By admin

Google has been told to pay the equivalent of $208,000 (USD) after recently losing a defamation case in Australia involving how it showed a 62-year-old man’s name in search results. Google is examining the original jury verdict and may file an appeal. A judge in the supreme court of the…