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Yahoo! CEO: Business 'grey areas' are international obstacle
Yang - a "believer in American values"…

By Reuters

Published: Friday 04 April 2008

Yahoo! chief executive Jerry Yang, whose company helped identify a Chinese dissident who was later jailed, said yesterday that legal "grey areas" overseas made doing business internationally difficult.

Yang, whose family emigrated from Taiwan when he was 10, called himself "a big believer in American values" but added: "As we operate around the world we don't have a heavy-handed American view."

Different countries have different attitudes toward the internet with some wanting major interventions and others preferring to leave the web unfettered.

Yang was speaking at an event at Georgetown University, where Yahoo! gave a $1m gift to study the link between the internet and international values. He said: "We operate within these environments to the extent that the law has any clarity."

He added: "We think we're hitting more grey areas than ever before. I don't think it's an easy question."

Yahoo! was criticised for its role in helping the Chinese government identify Shi Tao, a reporter accused of leaking state secrets abroad. Tao was sentenced to 10 years in prison in April 2007.

After the debacle, Yahoo! sold its Yahoo! China subsidiary to Chinese internet company Alibaba.com in exchange for a 40 per cent stake in Alibaba.

Yahoo! said in late March it was setting up a human-rights fund to help victims of government censorship. Harry Wu, a former political prisoner in China, will oversee the initiative. The company has declined to say how big the fund is.

In his remarks at the university, Yang detailed other humanitarian efforts that Yahoo! has undertaken, including helping raise money for the American Red Cross in the wake of Hurricane Katrina's disastrous strike on New Orleans in 2005.

During his visit to Washington DC, Yang also met with representative Nancy Pelosi, speaker of the US house of representatives, as well as senator Dianne Feinstein, a tough critic of China's human rights policies.


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