(Dieser Artikel ist auch in deutscher Sprache verfügbar)
Yahoo and Google seems to have problems adapting their business to the tough requirements of the German law regarding content harmful to minors and the implementation of the data retention directive, respectively.
Yahoo has recently changed the way the content filter setting for its photo-sharing service Flickr works for German members so that they can't view photos labelled as "moderate" or "restricted" via the search function. This caused a lot of complaints from German users, that created special groups on the platform such as Against Censorship! Also they started uploading anti-Flickr pictures in the Yahoo photo sharing service and tag them as "thinkflickrthink".
In the end Flickr allowed the German users to turn SafeSearch off to allow photos flagged as 'moderate' and tried to explain the situation.
"Flickr's intent is never to censor content, but rather to comply with local legal restrictions. In Germany, local law (Jugendmedien-Staatsvertrag JMStV) requires stringent age verification in order to display online content that could be considered harmful to minors." explained Flickr's co-founder Stewart Butterfield.
Community Manager, Heather Champ added : "The central problem is that Germany has much more stringent age verification laws than its neighbouring countries," she said. She described the risks of breaking these laws as being punished with "much harsher penalties, including jail time, for those with direct responsibility."
The German draft law for the implementation of the data retention directive also raises problems with the online service providers. The draft foresees that providers of e-mail services will basically have to keep records of the following: the user's IP address for each e-mail sent and for each access to the inbox as well as the sender's network ID for every e-mail received. According to an interview to the German economics magazine Wirtschaftswoche, Peter Fleischer, Google privacy counsellor considered the draft law as "a severe blow to privacy " and praised the possibility to have anonymous email accounts.
According to Heise he also declared that : "If need be we will simply switch off Google Mail in Germany", but this was later considered as a misinterpreted quote, and the correct statement was :
"We think that this law is bad for users and bad for privacy on the Internet. Google believes that users should have the right to create an email account without going through the hassle of having to prove exactly who they are. Anonymous email is particularly important for political dissidents, for example." Google also hoped that the German federal government will change its plans in this respect.
User protests against and Yahoo's justification for filters at Flickr
(18.06.2007)
http://www.heise.de/english/newsticker/news/91279
Against Censorship! at Flickr
http://www.flickr.com/groups/againstcensorship/
(Official Topic) German SafeSearch settings (20.06.2007)
http://www.flickr.com/help/forum/en-us/43626/
Google threatens to shut down e-mail service in Germany (25.06.2007)
http://www.heise.de/english/newsticker/news/91681
Lost In Translation: German Gmail Stays Put (27.06.2007)
http://blog.wired.com/business/2007/06/lost-in-transla.html
EDRI-gram: Data retention and increased surveillance in Germany (25.04.2007)
http://www.edri.org/edrigram/number5.8/germany-data-retention