New York Post

FIGHT OR FLIGHT SONG

Anthem risks Google’s role in Hong Kong

- By THOMAS BARRABI

Google is facing unpreceden­ted heat in Hong Kong as authoritie­s try to suppress a popular pro-democracy anthem, and the high-stakes spat has provoked speculatio­n that the US tech giant could exit the market entirely.

The Asian business mecca’s department of justice is seeking a court order banning Internet firms, including Google, from broadcasti­ng or distributi­ng the “Glory to Hong Kong” protest song. The government motion also calls for removing 32 YouTube videos featuring the anthem.

The injunction request is arguably Hong Kong’s most aggressive attempt yet to censor political content on US-run tech platforms. In 2020, Beijing imposed a national security law that granted the Chinese Communist Party sweeping power to crack down on dissent in the once-autonomous territory.

A full Google retreat from Hong Kong in the near future has become “very likely,” said Xiaomeng Lu, director of consulting firm Eurasia Group’s geotechnol­ogy practice. She argues the current legal tussle is following the same pattern that led Google to pull its search engine from mainland China in 2010.

Google fires back

“This is the same episode being replayed,” Lu told The Post. “It may take a while — it may not be next month. But I think the eventualit­y will kick in, whether it’s in a few months or in a year, a couple of years. I don’t think this will take five years.”

Hong Kong’s High Court has set a July 21 hearing date to consider the government’s request. If granted, it would weaken Google’s standing in the city, where pro-Beijing officials have already slammed the company for allowing “Glory to Hong Kong” to appear atop of search results.

A restrainin­g order also could open other US tech firms to a new wave of legal action over their content policies.

In their filing, local authoritie­s argued the lyrics of “Glory to Hong Kong” advocate “secession.”

Hong Kong officials have been embarrasse­d by recent episodes at internatio­nal sporting events, including a December rugby tournament in South Korea, in which the protest song was mistakenly played as the national anthem instead of China’s “March of the Volunteers.”

They blamed the incident on Google and demanded the company bury “Glory to Hong Kong” in its search results.

Google fired back at the time, noting it does not manually control search results and would not “remove web results except for specific reasons outlined in our global policy documentat­ion.”

Some experts say Hong Kong is simply too valuable to Google’s operations in Asia to abandon.

Among them is Niki Christoff, a prominent tech policy consultant who spent eight years working in strategic communicat­ions at Google, including when the company stopped offering its search engine in mainland China.

Christoff argued that Google “absolutely cannot cede the Chinese market for business purposes,” noting such an exit would effectivel­y close off access to a huge market of consumers and have cascading effects for its Android operating system, the Google Play Store and YouTube.

Google and other tech firms generally comply with local laws, even if they do not align with US doctrine. For example, Google has taken down YouTube videos criticizin­g Thailand’s monarchy in recent years.

“My hunch is that there might be a discussion about a historic stance on free speech versus the business consequenc­es of doing the takedown, and maybe some of the press consequenc­es of doing it,” Christoff said. “But dollars to donuts, I think they just take it down and continue operating.”

Publicly, Google has given little indication regarding how it will react.

A Google spokespers­on said the company is “committed to making informatio­n accessible to users.”

But the spokespers­on did not address the pending Hong Kong court battle.

Freedom of speech

Kathy Lee, Google Cloud’s managing director for Greater China, recently told the South China Morning Post, a Hong Kong newspaper, that the company was committed to its Hong Kong operations and working with local regulators.

When reached for comment about the proposed injunction, a spokespers­on for the Asia Internet Coalition said the industry trade group “will not be commenting on the matter at this point,” citing the looming court date.

Google CEO Sundar Pichai and the company’s board of directors probably are working overtime to salvage the situation, according to Stefano Bonini, an expert on boardroom dynamics and professor at the Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, NJ.

“The question that I think they’re weighing on the board right now is, ‘Yeah, we have an increasing cost of staying there, but it’s still an important market,’ ” Bonini said. “Do we want to [exit] and totally cede to the pressures of an authoritar­ian government and curb the freedom of speech?’’

Google isn’t the only Western operator facing censorship pressure in Hong Kong.

Earlier this month, popular versions of “Glory to Hong Kong” appeared to disappear from Apple’s iTunes chart and were also inaccessib­le on Facebook and Instagram, Reuters reported. The song was also briefly removed from Spotify‘s platform, although it later reappeared.

The Wall Street Journal recently reported that Google and other US tech giants are “slowly cutting off Hong Kong Internet users.”

 ?? ?? As brave protesters sing “Glory to Hong Kong,” Google CEO Sundar Pichai (inset) must decide whether to surrender to Chinese demands to suppress the song in searches or risk losing the whole lucrative market.
As brave protesters sing “Glory to Hong Kong,” Google CEO Sundar Pichai (inset) must decide whether to surrender to Chinese demands to suppress the song in searches or risk losing the whole lucrative market.

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