Gates Speaks Out Against Web Censorship

A recent story reported that Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates said that attempts by governments to censor Website contents were doomed, because banned information can seep out, despite official injunctions.

"The ability to really withhold information no longer exists," Gates told a government forum on the Internet.

Gates also commented that his company must comply with legal requirements in the countries where it operates.

The report went on to say that late last year, Microsoft shut down the site of a popular Chinese blogger at Beijing's request. The blog by Zhao Jing, writing under the pen name An Ti, appraised sensitive topics such as China's relations with Taiwan and media freedoms in China.

But the spread of free, private e-mail enabled users to disseminate information anyway, Gates said.

"You may be able to take a very visible Website and say that something shouldn't be there, but if there's a desire by the population to know something ... it's going to get out very broadly" via e-mail, Gates told the forum.

Some of Microsoft's rivals, including Google Inc. and Yahoo Inc. (Nasdaq:YHOO - news), also have hit problems with censorship in foreign countries.

Brad Smith, Microsoft's top lawyer, said Tuesday the company was tightening its policies regarding blocking Web journals.

The story went on to say that the software company operates a popular blogging technology called MSN Spaces. Smith said the changes would include efforts to make the banned content available to users elsewhere in the world even if Microsoft decided it had a legal duty to block it in a particular country.

The story concluded by saying that Gates was in the Portuguese capital for a two-day Microsoft-sponsored forum for government leaders to examine ways of harnessing Internet technology to make the public sector more efficient.