Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
China Media Social Networks The Internet

Zoom Confirms Beijing Asked It To Suspend Activists Over Tiananmen Square Meetings (axios.com) 145

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Axios: U.S. video conferencing company Zoom issued a statement on Thursday acknowledging that the Chinese government requested that it suspend the accounts of several U.S.- and Hong Kong-based Chinese activists for holding events commemorating the anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre. Zoom claims that it only took action because the Chinese government informed the company that "this activity is illegal in China" and that meeting metadata showed "a significant number of mainland China participants." Zoom said it does not have the ability to block participants from a certain country, and so it made the decision to end some of the meetings and suspend the host accounts.

Zoom said that it will no longer allow requests from the Chinese government to impact anyone outside of mainland China, and that it is working on technology that will allow it to remove or block participants based on geography. The statement indicates that Zoom is agreeing to China's demands to construct an in-company censorship apparatus to prevent mainland users from accessing sensitive meetings.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Zoom Confirms Beijing Asked It To Suspend Activists Over Tiananmen Square Meetings

Comments Filter:
  • WOW (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Stoutlimb ( 143245 ) on Thursday June 11, 2020 @11:36PM (#60173862)

    I'm old enough to remember the Cold War. I shudder to think of what would happen to any country that actively helped the Soviet Union repress it's own citizenry, or any Westerner that tries to help them. This is just insane. But hey, Black Lives Matter.

    • Re:WOW (Score:5, Insightful)

      by imperious_rex ( 845595 ) on Friday June 12, 2020 @12:59AM (#60174032)
      I remember the Cold War too, and what bothers me about the new cold war with China is that unlike the USSR, China has much greater financial ties and influence with the west. The old USSR had little to no influence on western companies because of their economic isolation. For example, American movie studios could make whatever they wanted about the Soviet Union (the best example being Red Dawn) because the eastern bloc movie market effectively didn't exist for American studios. But if an American movie studio wants into that sweet Chinese entertainment market, then they have to play ball and accommodate the CCP censorship machine. The same applies to other industries as well. I think Cold War II with China will be more financially painful for the west, but it will be as necessary as the first Cold War.
      • by ghoul ( 157158 )

        Ultimately with similar levels of tech, power comes from population. NATO had 3 times Warsaw Pact's population. China has about the same population as NATO so it has a chance of beating NATO. Militarily is not required when you can win the war of cultural influence.

        • That would ultimately come down to one side showing what the other side really is. China wouldn't win that game.

        • Re:WOW (Score:5, Interesting)

          by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Friday June 12, 2020 @01:54AM (#60174134)

          Militarily is not required when you can win the war of cultural influence.

          China doesn't have much cultural influence or soft power. Their foreign policy based on "might makes right" has alienated nearly all of their neighbors. China has no real friends and their only two reliable allies, Pakistan and Cambodia, are based on common enemies (India and Vietnam respectively), not shared values.

          • Half of Africa is indebted to China, and AFAIK some South American countries too.

          • Re:WOW (Score:4, Insightful)

            by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Friday June 12, 2020 @02:54AM (#60174212) Homepage

            They don't have to be in it for China, most countries will be in it for themselves. Being hooked on "made in China" is soft power, there's a reason for the saying "put your money where your mouth is". As long as the rulers get to keep ruling and it's better for their economy Putin is in it for Russia, Erdogan is in it for Turkey, all the shitholes in the Middle East - you think a super Islamic dictatorship like Saudi-Arabia can't flip sides? Many former colonies in Africa will go "Fight for our former colony masters? Fuck that" and stay out. And it's not countries really like to jump into somebody else's war, the UK was happy to wave Chamblerlain's "peace in our time" around as long as they weren't in Hitler's sights. The US didn't really get into WW2 until Pearl Harbor, for us here in Europe thank god for arrogant Japanese fuckers. I'm not sure the US would have been there for D-day without them.

          • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

            China doesn't have much cultural influence or soft power. Their foreign policy based on "might makes right" has alienated nearly all of their neighbors. China has no real friends and their only two reliable allies, Pakistan and Cambodia, are based on common enemies (India and Vietnam respectively), not shared values.

            They have soft power. Economic power is a soft power. With 1.4B people, that's a HUGE market of consumers. Any capitalist can see that a big market is a big opportunity to sell stuff to. China k

        • As long as NATO can avoid a land war with China and exploit its strengths (naval and air power), then the PLA's greater numbers are effectively neutralized. You have a good point, and if the US-China cold war ever does turn hot, I think one of the most damaging weapons in our toolbox is information warfare. I'm sure there are plans in place to bring down the Great Firewall should war break out, and unfettered access to the world may well hasten the downfall of the CCP.
          • Re:WOW (Score:4, Interesting)

            by SuricouRaven ( 1897204 ) on Friday June 12, 2020 @02:38AM (#60174204)

            Both NATO and China know that an all-out war isn't possible, because neither side would win: The nuclear weaponry would be used, and both sides are destroyed. That's why superpowers have these cold wars. The giant militaries are for having occasional small territorial disputes, while the real conflict is fought through economic manipulations, cultural influence, and proxy warfare.

      • by shanen ( 462549 )

        Well, I hope you get another mod point, but I'm still having the trouble seeing how to link your thoughtful comment to Zoom...

      • I picture the day some movie studio execs were sitting around the board room crying about how piracy was ruining their business. Then one of them looks at a map and sees how big China is and then looks up the population. He brings his hand to his forehead, "My god, a billion potential new customers" and starts hyperventilating.

    • I shudder to think of what would happen to any country that actively helped the Soviet Union repress it's own citizenry

      Zoom is not a country and despite what you and the Orange guy think we're not at war with China, not even a cold war. Throughout history capitalist enterprises have helped questionable regimes. The most prominent in the tech industry was https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    • It's the money. During the Cold War the US didn't import half a trillion dollars in goods and services from the Soviet Union
    • by k6mfw ( 1182893 )
      I remember driving to a friend's house listening on the radio real time reports of the Tiananmen Square event. Prior to that we saw various protests, gatherings, along with discussions among the press about how we see open demonstrations against the CCP. Then that day government forces cracked down, this was a news station KCBS and coverage was extensive. It was a long drive and almost entire time was covering this massacre. I arrived at friend's, many others were there watching TV. I mentioned about CCP fo
  • this activity is illegal in China if you don't pay free to be on the web.

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      The reality, the tech corporations are more than happy to censor as long as there is a buck in it. Their users as just gullible idiots, who will get squeezed and squeezed harder as time go on. More charges, more advertising, worse service and more censorship.

  • Think about this (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Jarwulf ( 530523 ) on Thursday June 11, 2020 @11:42PM (#60173886)
    when you ask the government or corporations to suppress some form of speech you don't like or are lies. Others can use the same mechanisms to suppress their version of speech they don't like or think are lies.
    • Then turn it into whack-a-mole.

      Make *EVERY* Zoom meeting a Tiananmen Square Zoom Meeting.

      12:00 - Budget, accounts and Tiananmen Square meeting
      13:15 - Marketing Tiananmen Square strategy conference call
      15:00 - Snack budget, vending machines, Tiananmen Square and sundries round-table
    • That depends on who exerts more influence and over whom. China can't give a shit what America thinks or the message China is spreading in the west. China is controlling its own citizens and it doing so by influencing American companies to toe the line, or kicking them out.

    • Leftists get angry when you bring up that point.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Companies that bow down to the lowest piece of shit
  • Thats Why (Score:4, Informative)

    by vlad30 ( 44644 ) on Friday June 12, 2020 @12:06AM (#60173934)
    Some companies and a lot of government departments have banned Zoom

    https://www.techrepublic.com/a... [techrepublic.com]

    https://fortune.com/2020/04/06... [fortune.com]

    • Nobody with friends and family still in China is totally free and independent.

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by ghoul ( 157158 )

        Most of the GIs who fought in WW1 still had family in Germany as massive German immigration happened in the 1880s to the US.
        In case you dont know the largest ethnic group in the US is German origin. German origin footsoldiers won WW1 against Germany for the US.
        Loyalties are not based simply on language and ethnicity or even family ties.
        US fought 2 World Wars against Germany and yet today the grandson of a German immigrant is the President.

        • There was no way for the Germans to directly target people about their relatives and threaten them. Why do you think China does hacking of personnel databases and companies? They know who is connected to who in the USA. They are known to threaten direct relatives of people who left China recently. Why shouldn't the extend that?
        • "and yet today the grandson of a German immigrant is the President."

          And he's working for Russia! It's just a big happy international party!

  • Chinese people will go somewhere else.
  • "Asked"? (Score:5, Funny)

    by Smerta ( 1855348 ) on Friday June 12, 2020 @12:59AM (#60174030)

    "Asked it" to suspend... yeah right!

    "Hey Zoom! Nice company you got there. Should would be a shame if something happened to it."

  • by DrXym ( 126579 ) on Friday June 12, 2020 @04:26AM (#60174334)
    Hasn't this been Zoom's schtick for quite some time now?
  • please stop being Chinese Communist Party companies - produce in western countries, or just not in China.

  • Who the fuck cares? This is a US corporation and any Chinese attempt to censor it should be considered an act of war.
    • I think "act of war" is a bit too much. American corporations should, however, just ignore the CCP. That's what we assumed would happen when we opened more and more trade with China - American companies would ignore the demands of the CCP, which would face enough domestic demand for American products to begin to loosen its grip.

      It didn't go as planned.

  • Zoom said it does not have the ability to block participants from a certain country...

    Nobody believes that.

  • Zoom said it does not have the ability to block participants from a certain country

    This must be the most stupid explanation of all time. Any amateur system admin can explain that the block can be done and no changes to the application is needed. The most primitive tech person knows how to identify which country an IP is from, or which block of IPs belongs to which country. The block can be implemented at the firewall and that should take care of the block. But they went ahead and made this up as an excuse. EXPOSED!!!

  • It's not like Zoom would block accounts if a US lawmaker would ask them to because the user of that account does something through Zoom which is illegal in the US. So let's not pretent this is any different. Zoom didn't have the technology in their platform to ban/block on region, and they are now going to implement that.
    Oh, it's China asking, oh well then it's a no no, but if the US would ask it, well, then it wouldn't be a problem....

    • In legal terms, Zoom is a US company. That means it's required to adhere to US laws and regulations. US government has jurisdiction over the company. China does not. If some US customer does something illegal (such as bombing a classroom with naked video) the US government definitely has the right to tell Zoom to suspend that account.

      US Government cannot tell a Chinese company to do this because they dont have jurisdiction. Same thing, Chinese government does not have the authority to tell Zoom to suspend
      • oh how wrong you are... Yes it has to adhere to US laws and regulations, but it also has to adhere to the laws and regulations of any country it provides its service to.

        And we've seen more than enough of US government telling chinese companies to not do something...

        And no the Chinese government can't tell Zoom to suspend a US customer account, but the problem here was Zoom not being able to prevent chinese 'customers' from joining that US 'customers Zoom meeting, and what that US 'customer' did was not lega

        • by sjames ( 1099 )

          The problem happens at the edge. Like in this case where Zoom terminated a user who lives in the U.S. because the Chinese government said so. Sometimes a legally mandated action in one country is a crime in another.

          • No, that's where you are wrong, Zoom didn't terminate the account of the user who lives in the US because the Chinese goverment said so, they terminated the account because Zoom could not block people form a certain region to JOIN the meeting the user in the US set up, and so the easiest way for now to stop users from China to connect to that meeting (which is what the Chinese government asked) is by blocking the whole account.. So get your facts straight.
            It was a technical shortcoming on Zoom's part why t

If all else fails, lower your standards.

Working...