Nash Russell a écrit 1 commentaire

  • [^] # Re: Yahoo contre la Muraille de Chine !!!

    Posté par  . En réponse à la dépêche Le net oui, la liberté d'expression non !. Évalué à 3.

    un p'tit article qui date du 02/15/2002 12:00:00 AM http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/000/9(...) en anglais .

    Y a aussi Cisco (pour le nommer) qui ne fait apparemment pas de "localisation" de ses produits, sauf pour la Chine (normal c'est un gros marché, la preuve, ils ont une zone DVD -la 6- rien que pour eux).

    et : Global One (a l'epoque filiale Sprinte, DT, FT, pas seulement de FT) et IBM.


    Et preuve que MS resiste à TOUS ceux qui veulent voir ses codes sources :

    But what is "normal" in China can be altered under duress. When Chinese authorities ordered Microsoft to surrender its software's underlying source codes--the keys to encryption--as the price of doing business there, Microsoft chose to fight, spearheading an unprecedented Beijing-based coalition of American, Japanese, and European Chambers of Commerce. Faced with being left behind technologically, the Chinese authorities dropped their demands. Theoretically, China's desire to be part of the Internet should have given the capitalists who wired it similar leverage. Instead, the leverage all seems to have remained with the government, as Western companies fell all over themselves bidding for its favor. AOL, Netscape Communications, and Sun Microsystems all helped disseminate government propaganda by backing the China Internet Corporation, an arm of the state-run Xinhua news agency.