Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Google Gives China the Hard Word, May Cut Google.cn

When I lived in Australia, a friend of mine introduced me to the phrase 'give the hard word'. It's shorthand for the relationship ultimatum, usually when the woman tells a guy that if they don't get married, she's gone. It seems like that's pretty much what happened with Google and China today.

It's been a rocky dating relationship. In early 2006, China agreed to censor its search results, but decided it would message that the results are censored - a demonstration that they did not agree with the policy. According to yesterday's blog author, who spoke on NPR today, they felt that their presence in the company would cotnribute to overall progress, and that eventually these silly rules would go away.



However, the couple got in a very big fight in December, the equivalent of tearing through all the bills, emails, and personal accounts: a cyberattack that looked suspiciously like the Chinese government digging up details on human rights activists. Ironically, the news couldn't be found on China's current top search engine, Baidu, today.

And now we come to the part that reminded me to put a 'my views are not the views of my company' on this blog: I think this is an excellent decision. It's ethical, even if it doesn't represent a highest revenue choice that clearly was reflected in the stock trading today (Google down, Baidu up). While it's much more likely that China will listen to a corporation than another government, it seems unlikely they will stand for this embarassment. But in my mind, and in the minds of hundreds of Chinese fans who put flowers in front of the Google China office today, it's one of the best things I've seen a company do for brand admiration.

When I worked for the Tibetan government-in-exile, you would see people arrive across the board and see how handing over an email address can result in grave harm. That's not something to be weighed against revenue potential.

Official Google blog post: "A new approach to China"

Monday, January 4, 2010

Breaking an Email Addiction


It's 10:30. I've been up for more than 2 hours, but something's completely different. I'm slightly twitchy from withdrawal. I haven't given up caffeine (I'd be sweating and glossy-eyed by now if that happened). But I haven't opened up email yet today, and that's a little odd for me.

As I cleaned out my email before the holidays, I thought the 0 inbox was as far as I'd go for my new year's resolution. Instead I've decided to finish 3 tasks before allowing myself into Outlook this morning: read a whitepaper, create a core team survey, and write this blog post.

A month ago, I would have switched browsers 5 times in the midst of this. I'd have written 10-20 emails by now. But today, I have all 3 target tasks done and I feel focused. Which, when you're not a morning person, is quite a lot.

I'm hoping I can keep this email delay habit up despite the usual triggers - waiting in line for casual carpool, arriving at my desk in the morning, whenever someone else checks email in front of me... let's see how it goes.