Google seems to be dabbling in the censorship game too, these days. They’ve added sites like The Pirate Bay, isoHunt, and 4Shared to their “blacklist”, which doesn’t prevent the pages from showing up if searched for, but does prevents the names of sites appearing in their Instant and Autocomplete services.
Google users typing words like “torrent,” “BitTorrent,” or “RapidShare” will have noticed that no suggested sites or search terms pop-up without the user actually hitting the search button – which seems like a minor thing, but has had a sharp impact on searches for terms relating to piracy or file-sharing.
It’s the piracy, or file-sharing part that has people upset. True, some of the sites that Google blacklists (to keep relations with copyright holders amicable) are cut-and-dried pirating sites; it doesn’t take a genius to figure out what The Pirate Bay is there for. At the same time, though, entirely legitimate file-sharing services, like BitTorrent and RapidShare, are being put at a disadvantage.
It’s also a less obvious, but still significant step towards comprehensive internet censorship. Said isoHunt owner Gary Fung:
It’s a lot more subtle than the censorship attempts made possible by the pending PROTECT IP and SOPA bills, but it’s still censorship and it starts small. Google is increasingly becoming a self-righteous Big Brother of the Web. So much for ‘Do no evil’.
In spite of which criticism, Google has said that they’ll continue to operate their piracy filter along their current lines, and possibly expand the blacklist in future.
[Source: TF]
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