The reason why I hate Yahoo is that one of its search engines (“yahooseeker”, so far as I can determine) periodically invades this site and pointlessly grabs dozens or hundreds of pages. Today, for instance, it spent 7 hours, 53 minutes and 49 seconds downloading 451 pages. If my readership ever reaches even modest levels, I will have to pay surcharges for that bandwidth consumption, and it is, at the very least, a symptom of technical incompetence.
I’ve commented on this Yahooliganism before. The company refuses to acknowledge that any problem exists, and the only solution that works is to shut out all search engines, which I don’t want to do. Yahooseeker ignores robots.txt files directed at it alone. So I feel that my hatred of Yahoo is fully justified.
On the other hand, one doesn’t like to harbor idiosyncratic loathings based solely on personal affronts. Therefore, I am almost relieved to discover that Yahoo engages in deplorable conduct with much more serious consequences than stealing resources from my ISP; to wit,
Reporters Without Borders today condemned the US firm Yahoo! for handing over data on one of its users in China which enabled the authorities there to send him to prison for eight years, the second such case that has come to light in recentmonths. . . .
It said it had discovered that Yahoo! customer and cyberdissident Li Zhi had been given his eight-year prison sentence in December 2003 based on electronic records provided by Yahoo. “How many more cases are we going to find?” it asked.
“We were sure the case of Shi Tao, who was jailed for 10 years last April on the basis of Yahoo-supplied data, was not the only one. Now we know Yahoo works regularly and efficiently with the Chinese police.
“The firm says it simply responds to requests from the authorities for data without ever knowing what it will be used for. But this argument no longer holds water. Yahoo certainly knew it was helping to arrest political dissidents and journalists, not just ordinarycriminals. . . .
Li, a 35-year-old ex-civil servant from the southwestern province of Dazhou, [was] sentenced on December 10, 2003 to eight years in prison for “inciting subversion.” He had been arrested the previous August after he criticized in online discussion groups and articles the corruption of local officials.
Local sources said Yahoo! Hong Kong’s cooperation with the police was also mentioned in the court’s verdict on Li.
Perhaps some Yahoo manager got a bonus for winning this official recognition of his employer’s civic activities.
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