The head of
Google in Brazil said Wednesday the Internet giant will take
actions to stop child pornography and hate crimes on a
social-networking Web site used here, but he did not
offer to provide user information to officials.
Alexandre
Hohagen's declaration to a Brazilian Senate panel marked a
step forward in efforts to block offensive material
from the popular Orkut Web site.
Last August
federal prosecutors said Google failed to comply with
requests to provide information about users who allegedly
spread child pornography and hate speech against black
people, Jews, and homosexuals on Orkut.
Google eliminated
the users from Orkut groups but refused to release
information about them to authorities, arguing it is bound
by U.S. laws guaranteeing freedom of speech.
About 55% of the
60 million-plus Orkut users worldwide are Brazilian.
Hohagen said the
company will install filters to stop the spread of child
pornography and retain six months of records on users who
access or spread illicit material, according to a
summary of his testimony presented on the Senate's Web
site Wednesday. Google now keeps those records for
only 30 days.
Google also will
advise authorities and provide them copies of the
forbidden text and images, Hohagen said, adding
that the new measures will likely be effective by
June.
Senators hailed
the decision and commended the company's cooperation.
''The Internet allows pedophiles to remain in the shadows.
It's time to exchange shadows for jail,'' Sen. Romeu
Tuma said.