One cool thing about living in China is you get to see if companies really have any principles above profit and survival much earlier than the western world:
CEOs in the west openly criticize government ONLY when they are fully protected by the law isn’t the backbone that you think it is.
All of them are prone to “pulling an IBM” when the real dictators arrive. We just observe these tactics much earlier than you do.
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@bitinn how do they show up sooner, could you explain more?
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@demofox If you know there is no chance of real negotiations, you bow to the policy much sooner. when I worked at MSFT, Ballmer (CEO at the time) once said internally “we have a global strategy and a China strategy”. It was around the time Google refused to censor search results in China and get kicked out entirely.
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@demofox MSFT was facing antitrust lawsuits from Chinese government but not because of its monopoly on OS (which it obviously had since 1990s) but because it wanted governments to upgrade their legacy Windows XP to Windows 7 (or pay more expensive support contracts). China instead put them in a huge antitrust case and MSFT eventually compromised.
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@demofox Google (because one of their founders were from USSR) were the last company to ever make a principled stand against Chinese government and you can see where this got them. (Google are now ran by different people you can see how the tide has shifted).
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@bitinn thanks!
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