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China Syndrome

By Annalee Newitz, AlterNet. Posted February 21, 2006.


What does Star Trek have to do with Google in China?
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Like many geeks who came of age in the 1990s, I've internalized the ethics of Star Trek: The Next Generation. That's why, more than a decade after Captain Picard issued his last command to "engage" on UPN, concerns about tech companies collaborating with the Chinese government make me think about the Prime Directive.

Also known as Starfleet's General Order No. 1, the Prime Directive is the heart of morality in the Star Trek universe. It states simply that Federation representatives should not interfere with the development of other societies. Often this is interpreted to mean not giving sophisticated technology to "primitive" groups who can't handle it wisely.

This idea of "developing societies" -- so popular on Earth today -- suggests that all cultures are on the same path but some are just "behind." As a result, we've been treated to some embarrassing, paternalistic scenes that, at their worst, are rat holes of Jar Jar-ism, the sci-fi-inflected style of racism in which aliens stand in for human racial groups and are stereotyped accordingly.

Of course, the Prime Directive has its utopian side too. It prevents Federation ideologues from imposing their culture on alien species who may not want to fly around the universe in a box full of people who love hierarchy, repress their feelings, and always follow orders.

It's not surprising that the United States is currently struggling with similar principles, in the context of technology-sharing with China. The Star Trek universe has always been a fantasy projection of the United States universe -- sort of like The West Wing in space. And for most U.S. citizens, China is a nation whose inhabitants and cultures are as incomprehensible as those on the planet Vulcan. What most of us know about China is what we see on Google, or read in the New York Times. In fact, the Times just published an interesting story by Joseph Kahn about searching on "Tiananmen Square" via Google China versus Google U.S. The top five images U.S. visitors get are of tanks bearing down on protesting students. In China, the top five images are of regional landmarks and Chinese people visiting them. The point of Kahn's story is simple: Look, the Chinese government is suppressing political history. True enough, but the U.S. Google search is suppressing everything but one event in the long history of Tiananmen Square, whose towers date back to 1417.

Try Googling "Washington Mall," a site of many violent U.S. protests. Of the 20 top images, 19 are tourist shots. That's because U.S. residents view the Washington Mall as more than a place where Vietnam protesters were teargassed. It's also a tourist destination with a long political and cultural history.

Don't get me wrong -- I'm not condoning censorship, nor am I questioning whether censorship is happening in China. Google has admitted that the Chinese government is suppressing images and search results, and Cisco has confessed to helping the Chinese build their "great firewall," a vast internet surveillance and censorship machine. But is the United States in any position to condemn Google and Cisco (along with other colluding companies like Yahoo!), given that it has asked companies like these to spy on U.S. citizens -- often in flagrant violation of the law? Congress and the media have been casting the debate over China in terms of the Prime Directive: Should we give this alien culture a technology they may not be wise enough to use? It's a comforting strategy, allowing the United States to think of itself as morally and technologically superior, while China is in the role of a "less developed" alien group who might misuse our transporters and replicators.

But China is not a bunch of "primitive" aliens -- it's the technological and moral equal of the United States. It was, after all, a Chinese cryptographer who found the first soft spots in the armor of SHA-1, an allegedly unbreakable cryptographic tool developed by the NSA. And you want to talk morals? The U.S. government has done everything it is currently accusing the Chinese government of doing, using the same technology from the same companies. It's time to stop watching Star Trek and get real. High-tech companies should absolutely be bargaining with China over human rights -- asking for less censorship in exchange for more goodies -- but they should be striking the same bargains with the U.S. government.

Digg!

Annalee Newitz is a surly media nerd who is sick of hearing people rant about China when all they know is what they learned from Hong Kong action movies.

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Annalee
Posted by: josh42042 on Feb 21, 2006 2:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I only wish I had an article of yours to read every day.

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» RE: Annalee Posted by: bubbha
Don't blame Star Trek!
Posted by: goldmarx on Feb 21, 2006 4:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If the buffoons who are our elected representatives misuse references to Star Trek to justify public policy, that's not Star Trek's fault.

The Prime Directive(P.D.) is designed to keep civilizations who have achieved warp drive (faster-than-light interstellar space travel) from interfering with those who have yet to do so. It is a science-fiction metaphor for both Gene Roddenberry's deep-seated opposition to the Vietnam War and a measure designed to prevent future such conflicts.

In Trek Universe chronological order, the P.D. was first used by the Vulcans in "Start Trek: First Contact" movie, in which the Vulcans revealed themselves to Zefrem Cochrane only after he had successfully demonstrated his own version of warp drive. The official Federation P.D. comes, more or less, from this first encounter between us humans and the Vulcans.

The problem with the aforementioned analogy with China is that this is NOT America's "first contact" with China, so to discuss the Googol controversy as if it were is ludicrously ahistorical.

I don't agree with your analysis of Star Trek as the "West Wing" in space - we rarely see Federation politics from the viewpoint of the Federation President. The United Federation of Planets is most closely parallel to the United Nations - even their logos look alike.

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» RE: Don't blame Star Trek! Posted by: jonny_noog
» RE: Don't blame Star Trek! Posted by: DaBear
» RE: Don't blame Star Trek! Posted by: may261989
» RE: Don't blame Star Trek! Posted by: MartianBachelor
Actually...
Posted by: medstudgeek on Feb 21, 2006 10:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I really don't think Bush and Co. are Trekkies. Clinton supposedly was fond of the show, which I can believe, since whatever his failings he was pretty smart, but Bush apparently is an exercise nut and all his minions are following suit. The guy is really anti-intellectual and Star Trek has always been the favored show of geeks and idealists.

Oh, and I think Star Wars fans are conservative and Star Trek fans are liberal. Anyone want to comment?

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» your sort of right Posted by: may261989
No moral high ground for Bush
Posted by: Fang-Face Dreamweaver on Feb 22, 2006 4:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But is the United States in any position to condemn Google and Cisco (along with other colluding companies like Yahoo!),

No. the Bush regime does not have any kind of moral high ground on this issue or on any other. I have noted that the U.S. State Department and a House subcommittee are addressing the collusion of U.S. based companies with Chinese censorship, but I consider these actions to be paper tigers. The Bush regime itself constrains access to information by extorting the use of filtering software, for one thing, but while the real patriots in the U.S. government are attempting to promote freedom of access to information on the internet, the Bush regime is busy subverting and distorting what information it will allow to be accessible.

This is a very clever ploy, so I feel certain that it is happening by accident. Government weiners aren't smart enough to come up with something like that deliberately.

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The pot calling the kettle black
Posted by: Sojourner on Feb 22, 2006 6:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, there are human rights abuses in China. Yes, there are human rights abuses in the US and committed by the US. Are the two morally equivalent? I doubt it, but I don't know enough about it. Ask Amnesty International.

I have been interested to see a few more articles about our economic dependence on Chinese bank loans via purchase of US government bonds saying that we are so in bed together that China has no reason to cut off its nose to spite its face.

Yes, anyone who is stupid enough to do so can do so. And that's the rub. Wars get started by nations out-stupiding each other. With our ICBM arsenal that we refuse to reduce, we are prime candidates for being reeeal stupid. It's a fear factor that anyone who wants to get elected or to sell newspapers can exploit. They will attempt to exploit it as sure as the sun coming up.

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Joseph Kahn?
Posted by: antiapathy on Feb 22, 2006 7:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
KAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHNNNNNNNNNN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Sorry, couldn't resist.

We already have a prime directive, it is called capitalism. Do no evil, unless that evil makes you a little richer. Look at how international patents are killing thousands and thousands of HIV patients every year. Google and Yahoo! are doing exactly what corporations were created to do.

I think it's a little ironic how big of a deal this google thing has become. Americans in general don't care that our corporate/capitalist system is lowering wages and destroying the environment. But we are all of the sudden up in arms about a company colluding with a repressive regime. If we really cared for the people in China who are being repressed, we should launch a general boycott of all corporations that are in cahoots with the Chinese government... We can't pick and choose a select few and expect any meaningful results.

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Cephalis
Posted by: cephalis on Feb 22, 2006 8:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A more appropriate analogy regarding Google & China would be the current controversy in California over physicians refusing to participate in state executions because of the conflict in their ethics. It is way past the time for corportations to formulate a code of ethics. It boggles my mind the way that we absolve them of any responsibility for the harmful effects on our societies of their grossly reprehensable behavior.

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I Like...
Posted by: Peacepole1@miraclestation2000.com on Feb 22, 2006 10:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I like the analogy and the spirit behind the article -

I would like to just point out that I find it interesting the we americans speak of america and our government as if it were something "out there" - some entity separate from us.

and indeed it seems to act like that most of the time -
but it isn't a bunch of foreigners setting policy - it's us.
and us is it.

anyway foreigners are to busy watching our ports for us and keeping us safe from.....

other foreigners! ;-)

just kidding!

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Living life by the PD, what BS!
Posted by: johnecolby on Feb 22, 2006 12:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you choose to see the world through the lens of Star Trek, I sympathize for you. I don't condone these companies work in helping the US spy on its citizens any more than I do them helping the Chinese spy on theirs. By your reading of the PD, American companies would have free reign to provide technology to fascist governments like Nazi Germany to use for the purpose of genocide, which they did by the way.

By any reading of the PD, American companies should withhold advanced technologies which can be used to dangerous ends by other countries, like those Yahoo! and the like are providing to China. These technologies are resulting in people's deaths. If your're OK holding their spots in a Chinese gulag, hey I'm all for the PD!

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If the JimKirk broke it ... it WASN'T the Prime Directive
Posted by: AdamSelene40 on Feb 22, 2006 2:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And, if it WAS the Prime Directive, the JimKirk never broke it.

(I picked up that little aphorisim as a Boscon workshop on Federation Law Practice which started with the disclaimer -- "OK ... we all know that Classic Trek was just a TV SHOW FOR KIDS!! )

It did, however give the Boomer generation (Dick Cheney is a Boomer, too, you know) the idea of the Star Fleet issue adjustable moral compass. It always points in the direction you intend to go anyway -- just like Trek plots.

So, of course "Don't Be Evil" can be interpreted as "Well, WE'RE not "being evil" The Chinese Government is. And if we didn't do business with them than we'll lose market share to Yahoo, and where would all the anti-evil investors who bought Google at $210 be, then?"

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stanimal
Posted by: stanimal on Feb 22, 2006 6:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I doubt that Bush has the attention span to sit through an entire eposide of Star Trek, I see him more as a He-Haw fan.
I have lived and worked in China for two years and have several reasons for being here.
A primary one is to show the Chinese people directly that not all americans agree with current american foreign policy.
The Chinese are quickly growing tired of Bush's tongue lashing of its exports and currency value.
The reason why the Chinese limit U.S. imports is they are reprioritizing the contracts with other Asian nations. They feel trade amongst neighboring countries is better than depending on a hypocritical nation of values and morals.
China is currently building a "Panama Canal" across Thailand so its fleet of ships don't have to surcumvent the Maylay peninsula and building "12 String of Pearls" ports with airfields large enough to support long range military aircraft through its shipping lanes to the Middle East and Africa. They want to ensure security for its trade network towards its future long term associate countries and doesn't trust the U.S. administration retoric and intentions.
China's currency future will not be pegged to the dollar, but a basket of curriencies, this should disturb U.S. goverment treasuries greatly. With Iran begnning in March to demand euros for its oil instead of dollars, will begin the demise of the dollars world financial domminance. Will the pretext of Iran's nuke program become the ruse of an illegal Iranian occupation, when in reality its to stop Iran, just like the U.S. did when Saddam Hussien started demanding payment for euros at the start of "Desert Storm II?
The current missguided foreign policy blunders the Bush administration continues to practice, erodes world opinion of this great country and enhanses China's standing above it. It's amusing to watch the Bushes complain about cencorship in China when they themselves are found out to be doing the very same at home, spying on citizens, running torture camps and abusing prisionors, manipulation of information, etc... .
Bush has not learned that it is dangerous to throw rocks in glass houses or awakening dragons.
Stanimal

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Star Trek has all the answers we'll ever need
Posted by: DaBear on Mar 2, 2006 10:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Star Trek: Insurrection warned us about the Bush junta. Did we listen? no. well, some of us did but far too many of us didn't and gave all of us the shaftomatic on the dirt road express. Where is Picard's ancestor, dammit! We need a hero.

Star Trek: Enterprise layed out (or started to before the Paramount Boomer beancounter proto-fascists pulled the plug with help from Braga, that little sellout-simp, there's always a fifth column...) the complications and the "milieu" that led/leads to the Prime Directive, a directive that Picard, Sisko, Janeway, et al. would bend and workaround on numerous occasions, a couple hundred years later for a variety of reasons. Intereference comes in handy from time to time, but it never is problem-free, kinda like sex.

I love Annalee's comparisons to the China/Google syndrome. Things are feeling very Enterprise-esque of late. Maybe that's why they pulled the show, because it was spanking the Man more than he could tolerate, again, kinda like sex... a season four interruptus. those bastards!

But comparing Trek to West Wing?! puhLEEZ, somebody spank me.

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