Sunday, June 29, 2014

Google executives visit Cuba for first time to promote open Internet

Google executives visit Cuba for first time to promote open Internet
BY DAVID ADAMS
MIAMI Sun Jun 29, 2014 3:13am EDT

(Reuters) - A team of top Google executives is visiting Cuba to promote
open Internet access, according to a dissident blogger who says she met
the group in Havana.

The team, led by Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt, met with Cuban
officials as well as independent people in the technology and digital
field, according to a report on the independent news website
14ymedio.com, which was started last month by blogger Yoani Sanchez.

Google is on an official two-day visit "to promote the virtues of a free
and open Internet," the report said.

Schmidt appeared to confirm the report when he retweeted a message on
Twitter posted by Sanchez about the visit.

Neither Google nor the Cuban government made any official statement
about the executives' presence in Cuba.

Cuba does not allow open Internet access. Only 2.6 million out of a
population of 11.2 million have Internet access, almost entirely limited
to government-run centers, foreign companies and tourist hotels. Most of
those who do have access are only been able to explore a limited,
state-controlled basket of approved websites.

Schmidt, who was Google's chief executive from 2001 to 2011, is becoming
more visible on issues involving technology and world affairs. His
mandate as executive chairman involves government outreach, thought
leadership and building partnerships and business relationships,
according to the company.

Schmidt was accompanied by Jared Cohen, director of Google Ideas, as
well as two other staff, Sanchez said.

Google Ideas describes itself as a "a think/do tank that explores how
technology can enable people to confront threats in the face of
conflict, instability or repression," according to its website.

Schmidt and Cohen are the coauthors of The New Digital Age, published
last year, and have a track record of speaking with leaders of countries
that restrict free speech to advocate for a free and open Internet.

Schmidt was the first high-profile tech executive to visit Myanmar last
year in the wake of reforms that prompted Western nations to ease
sanctions following decades of military dictatorship.

The Google delegation in Havana met with students and was given a tour
of Havana's University of Information Sciences on Saturday, according to
14ymedio.

Sanchez started 14ymedio, Cuba's first independent online newspaper in
May, although the site has been repeatedly blocked in Cuba.

The Cuban government sought to discredit Sanchez as a paid propagandist
doing the bidding of the U.S. government.

The 14ymedio.com site seeks to draw attention away from the
communist-ruled country's state-controlled media and challenge the
government's heavy media restrictions. Cuba has been tolerating more
criticism in recent years but not yet from such a professional-looking
website produced on the island.

Sanchez's blog on daily life and politics in Cuba, Generation Y, has
rattled the Cuban establishment, and she has won prestigious media
awards in the United States and Europe.

(Additional reporting by Edwin Chan; Editing by Bill Trott)

Source: Google executives visit Cuba for first time to promote open
Internet | Reuters -
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/06/29/us-google-cuba-idUSKBN0F30WN20140629

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