Archive: censorship

Since I am not writing the next Scottish Roundup (yes, it is painful) I will write some of my snidey comments here. There seems to be some strange goings-on in the Western Isles.

Angus Nicolson, a former SNP councillor who was kicked out of the party, claims he is now being gagged. And again today. Whatever is happening, it seems as though there are some dirty tricks going on.

Apparently some SNP people — or somebody pretending to be SNP people — are phoning up Isles FM in an intimidating manner and getting debates pulled off the air if somebody won’t toe the SNP line. As Mr Nicolson notes, it is not very good for democracy when somebody appears to have so much power over what gets broadcast.

It’s very strange though. I am sure that politics on the Western Isles have a bit of a life of their own. Reading about this sort of thing is like being at somebody else’s house then walking into the kitchen to find your guest and his wife arguing. So I’d better just back out…

(While we’re (sort of) on the matter of Scottish Roundup, Facebookers might want to take a look here. I’ll let you know my plans for it later on.)

The media’s love affair with Google has continued apace today. Google sniffed, and the media shat itself.

While I obviously don’t think it’s pleasent that Google is censoring its results in China, I am actually surprised that they weren’t already doing that. Remember a year or so back when MSN banned its Chinese users from using words like “democracy” on MSN Spaces? This is not new. Google is not setting a precedent.

Google’s censorship was the subject of Victoria Derbyshire’s phone-in (which is always a laugh, or depressing, depending on how optimistic you feel about humanity). One man phoned it to say that he had deleted Google from his own computer, as well as his wife’s and childrens’ computers, in protest. To which another texter replied, “Who’s the censor now?”

And who is prepared to get rid of Windows from their computer because of MSN’s own censorship? And as one commenter over at The Guardian‘s tech blog notes:

Who’s being hypocritical here? Google, or those who condemn its actions in China while being more tolerant of “good” censorship in Germany and France?

What is with the media’s obsession with Google? When Google Talk launched, the BBC was all over it. It was mentioned in Five Live’s bulletins every half hour, it got its own report on the 6 O’Clock News, and probably lots more coverage as well. This was despite the fact Google Talk is complete shit. It might have had a couple of nifty, quaint features, but that doesn’t merit a slot on the 6 O’Clock News. Google Talk did nothing new then, and it still does nothing new now. I never use it. In fact, I think just about everything Google has done since Gmail was launched has been a complete disappointment.

MySpace users are miffed at Murdoch, the new owner of MySpace, who has begun censoring users’ profiles. (Via)