Although I'm totally behind freedom of speech and information, and a big fan of Amnesty International, I'm thinking this campaign is way off base. You're trying to blame internet search engine companies for Chinese repression in Tibet and human rights violations? That's a stretch of the imagination.
A link to the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights:
http://www.unhchr.ch/html/intlinst.htm. No mention of internet search engines or Google.com.
I suggest that if you want to improve the human rights of people you can find far more malevolent perpetrators of oppression than Google.com.
Greetings!
Just to clarify, the purpose of this forum is to provide an outlet of discussion for human rights, abuses, violations and any aspect thereof. Are there more damaging representations and/or violations? Assuredly, and I invite you to post them as you will.
However. Censorship as a rule is always a violation of human rights because it represents repression of a people. As a fan of Amnesty International, you likely are aware on July 20 of this year, they launched a global campaign specifically against internet repression. The campaign aims to claim back the web as a force for change in the face of an increasing willingness on the part of technology companies to aid censorship and repression.
And thus.