Posted by : Aron четвъртък, 21 февруари 2013 г.

Criticism of Yahoo!



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia





Yahoo! has received criticism for a variety of issues.








Contents


[hide]


  • 1 Yahoo! paid inclusion controversy

  • 2 Adware and spyware

  • 3 Work in the People's Republic of China

    • 3.1 Outing of Chinese dissidents

      • 3.1.1 Shi Tao

      • 3.1.2 Li Zhi

      • 3.1.3 Wang Xiaoning





  • 4 User-Created chat rooms, message boards, and profiles

  • 5 Image search

  • 6 Shark's fin controversy

  • 7 Closing down Geocities

  • 8 Yahoo! Groups remodel 2010

  • 9 See also

  • 10 References



[edit]Yahoo! paid inclusion controversy


In March 2004, Yahoo! launched a paid inclusion program whereby commercial websites were guaranteed listings on the Yahoo! search engine after payment.[1] This scheme was lucrative, but proved unpopular both with website marketers (who were reluctant to pay), and the public (who were unhappy about the paid-for listings being indistinguishable from other search results).[2] As of October 2006, Paid Inclusion ceased to guarantee any commercial listing and only helped the paid inclusion customers, by crawling their site more often and by providing some statistics on the searches that led to the page and some additional smart links (provided by customers as feeds) below the actual url.

[edit]Adware and spyware


Yahoo! has also been criticized for funding spyware and adware — advertising from Yahoo!’s clients often appears on-screen in pop-ups generated from adware that a user may have installed on their computer without realizing it by accepting online offers to download software to fix computer clocks or improve computer security, add browser enhancements, etc. The frequency of advertising pop-ups for spyware, generated from a partnership with advertising distributor Walnut Ventures, who had a direct partnership with Direct Revenue, could be increased or decreased based on Yahoo!’s immediate revenue needs, according to some former employees in Yahoo!’s sales department.[3][4]

[edit]Work in the People's Republic of China









































Part of a series on
Censorship
Example of redaction on (a copy of) a document
Media regulation


  • Books

  • Films



  • Internet (circumvention)



  • Music

  • Post (mail)

  • Press



  • Radio

  • Speech and expression



  • Thought

  • Video games


Methods


  • Bleeping

  • Book burning



  • Broadcast delay



  • Burying of scholars



  • Censor bars

  • Chilling effect



  • Concision

  • Conspiracy of silence



  • Content-control software



  • Euphemism (minced oath)



  • Expurgation

  • Fogging



  • Gag order

  • Heckling



  • Internet police



  • Memory hole

  • National intranet



  • Newspaper theft

  • Pixelization



  • Prior restraint

  • Propoganda



  • Purge

  • Revisionism



  • Sanitization / redaction



  • Self-censorship

  • Speech code



  • Strategic lawsuit

  • Verbal offence



  • Whitewashing

  • Word filtering


Contexts


  • Blasphemy

  • Criminal



  • Corporate

  • Hate speech



  • Ideological

  • Media bias



  • Moralistic fallacy



  • Naturalistic fallacy



  • Politics

  • Religion



  • Suppression of dissent



  • Systemic bias


By country


  • Censorship



  • Freedom of speech



  • Internet censorship





  • v

  • t

  • e



While technologically and financially you [Yahoo] are giants, morally you are pygmies

— Tom Lantos, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee (2007)[5]

 



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