Yahoo pulls out of China, citing ‘challenging’ environment

Paco Dennis

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"HONG KONG (AP) — Yahoo Inc. said Tuesday it has pulled out of China, citing an increasingly challenging operating environment.

The withdrawal was largely symbolic, as many of the company’s services were already blocked by China’s digital censorship. But recent government moves to expand its control over tech companies generally, including its domestic giants, may have tipped the scales for Yahoo.

“In recognition of the increasingly challenging business and legal environment in China, Yahoo’s suite of services will no longer be accessible from mainland China as of November 1,” the company said in a statement. It said it “remains committed to the rights of our users and a free and open internet.”

Yahoo is the latest foreign tech company to exit China. Google gave up several years ago, and Microsoft’s professional networking platform LinkedIn said last month it would shutter its Chinese site, replacing it with a jobs board instead. The departures illustrate the choices internet companies face in a huge potential market, but one where the government requires them to censor content and keywords deemed politically sensitive or inappropriate.

In their place, Chinese companies have filled the void, creating an alternative internet with its own digital giants. The Baidu search engine has largely replaced Yahoo and Google in China, and WeChat and Weibo are the leading social media platforms.

Yahoo’s departure coincided with the implementation of China’s Personal Information Protection Law, which limits what information companies can gather and sets standards for how it must be stored."


2 minute read

https://apnews.com/article/yahoo-inc-leaving-china-f3b589754224bc663d5e83ec385eb49a
 

Years ago, I used yahoo for email. Also, years ago, Yahoo revealed the actual names of Chinese journalists to the Chinese government behind the incognito email address. The journalists privacy was not protected. I am not sure what they were writing and sharing but they had the freedom to speak in an uncensored environment. The Chinese government asked for their true identities and Yahoo turned that information over to them. I often wondered what happened to the journalists. That day, I dropped yahoo services and have never logged on or gone near their webpage.
 
Of course, I don't have first hand info about China's digital censorship. But, on the face of it, I do like China’s Personal Information Protection Law. The main business model of Yahoo,. et al, is to mine personal data from its users to sell to targeted advertisers. This sounds innocuous until you want to get something like insurance, where your rate may be determined by what Yahoo dug up., or not get hired because of something you posted as a teen on Facebook. I'm not buying Yahoo's "commitment to the rights of its users". They're not making money in China. I do question why Chinses tech companies are prospering, and foreign companies aren't. It could be China is squeezing out competition in favor of the home team.
 

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