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Shutterstock’s founder and CEO Jon Oringer replied to the petition several days later those hoping for a change of heart were to be disappointed. The text of the petition, provided to The Intercept, can be read in full below.
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Xi Jinping is NOT a dictator because he specifically said so. Want to write about Taiwan? It never existed. “Want to write a story about the protests in Hong Kong? They never existed. “Yes, we’re a creative photo and video marketplace, but we are also an editorial news hub,” one Shutterstock employee told The Intercept. Chinese internet users already struggle to discuss even the tamest of taboo subjects now, it seemed, the situation would get a little worse, with the aid of yet another willing American company. Shutterstock’s censorship feature appears to have been immediately controversial within the company, prompting more than 180 Shutterstock workers to sign a petition against the search blacklist and accuse the company of trading its values for access to the lucrative Chinese market. Last year Shutterstock announced a $15 million investment in ZCool, noting that owing to the partnership, “Shutterstock’s content now powers large technology platforms in China such as Tencent Social Ads,” an online advertising subsidiary of the tremendously popular Chinese internet conglomerate Tencent. The photo company’s relationship with China dates back to at least 2014, when it struck a distribution deal with ZCool, a Chinese social network and portfolio site for visual artists. Deciding to censor is a particularly stark inversion of values for Shutterstock, which markets itself as an enabler of creative expression. Household names like Apple, Blizzard Entertainment, the NBA, and Google have all garnered harsh criticism for letting the policy directives of the Communist Party of China, and the gilded promise of a billion customers, dictate company strategy. Shutterstock’s decision to silently aid China’s censorship agenda comes at a time of heightened scrutiny into the relationship between corporate America and President Xi Jinping’s authoritarian regime. Variations of these terms, including “umbrella movement” - the precursor to the mass pro-democracy protests currently gripping Hong Kong - are also banned. Under the new system, which The Intercept is told went into effect last month, anyone with a mainland Chinese IP address searching Shutterstock for “President Xi,” “Chairman Mao,” “Taiwan flag,” “dictator,” “yellow umbrella,” or “Chinese flag” will receive no results at all. In early September, Shutterstock engineers were given a new goal: The creation of a search blacklist that would wipe from query results images associated with keywords forbidden by the Chinese government. But in China, there is now a very small, very significant gap in Shutterstock’s offerings. The company now does business in more than 150 countries. The publicly traded company built a $639 million-per-year business on the strength of its vast - sometimes comically vast - catalog of images depicting virtually anything a blogger or advertiser could imagine.
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company to willingly support China’s censorship regime, blocking searches that might offend the country’s authoritarian government, The Intercept has learned.
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Shutterstock, the well-known online purveyor of stock images and photographs, is the latest U.S.
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