January, 2010


12
Jan 10

Credit where credit is due (more Google tea leaves to read)

One of the very first things that made me skeptical about Google was their approach to censorship in China, which I thought deeply compromised their supposed ‘don’t be evil’ approach to the world. It struck me that their position- summarized as “the benefits of increased access to information for people in China and a more open Internet outweighed our discomfort in agreeing to censor some results” bespoke a fair amount of arrogance about the value of Google and a discounting of the value of uncensored information. I didn’t mention that issue in my recent post about Google and reading their tea leaves, but it certainly is one of the big tea leaves to be read.

And so they’ve added another layer to the tea leaves with this announcement that Google will be backing out of censorship in China and possibly abandoning China altogether. Go read it.

It is hard to imagine any other American company having the cojones to make a public statement like it, and I have to applaud them for it. Google is different; anyone who tells you otherwise doesn’t understand them very well. The question we must continually ask is ‘how different, and for how long will they remain different?’ Schmidt’s quotes the other day suggest they are becoming more like others, and that is troubling, and worth writing about and reflecting on (not least by people within Google.) But to even post this is a reminder that they are still very different from most of their peer large corporations. I suppose for those of us who continue to read the tea leaves the followthrough after this post will say a lot as well.


7
Jan 10

quick life update

If it matters to you, you might want to know that I have no network at home from sometime yesterday until Friday night, and I also have lousy cell connection1, so I’ll basically be off the network when not at work for the next few days.

Otherwise, it has been a good week:

  • first real paycheck in waaaay too long
  • moved in to our new apartment, and slept in my own bed for the first time since August (almost making me forget that I hate this mattress)
  • reactivated netflix for the first time since 2006
  • discovered my new apartment has cat5 through the whole building (so I can apparently get 100Mb connection at home) and a good Thai place with a $4 thai tapas happy hour around the corner.
  • began my caltrain commute (long, but 90 minutes of it can be used to work, which is great) and discovered CaltrainDroid, which is terrific.

Life is beginning to feel normal again, and I couldn’t be more excited about that.

  1. VOIP suggestions that work with Google Voice are welcome, and/or a gizmo invite :) []

5
Jan 10

job satisfaction

Some of the legal stuff I do at Mozilla1 is fairly dull, painstaking contract work. What makes it worthwhile (besides the paycheck) is seeing that something good came out of it. So it was nice to see this blog post – I only played a small part in getting the new data center up and running (at most a couple workdays rather than months of my life), but it still gives me a nice warm fuzzy feeling inside to know I helped out.

  1. really, much of the legal work most lawyers do []

This work by Luis Villa is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States.