Free Speech
This is a clarification of Dow's recent actions in protecting Freedom of Speech.
On December 3, DowEthics became aware of an unauthorized web
site residing at Dow-Chemical.com.
Our lawyers and publicity department were deeply troubled by
this website, as it purported to explain in unvarnished language
why Dow is not cleaning up the site of an industrial incident
that occurred many years ago in India.
The website was an affront to our right to Free Speech, and we
immediately contacted the upstream provider for this false
website, gently requesting that our rights be protected.
The provider, Verio, graciously complied with our letter citing
the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). Not only did they
shut down Dow-Chemical.com, but as a good corporate citizen,
they agreed to shut down an entire network (Thing.net) of
websites many of which, while unrelated to dow-chemical.com,
appear to serve no commercial purpose, being
dedicated to the unproductive analysis and critique of society
and corporate behaviour.
We applaud the courage of Verio in taking this act, as it sends
a strong signal to the "artists, activists," and other
blatantly non-commercial users of Thing.net. That message can
be stated simply: Corporate America will defend its right to
Free Speech on the internet rigorously. Verio ensured that
this message was understood by giving Thing.net a 60-day
eviction notice following the network's restoration to the
internet. This is the kind of justice which Dow can afford,
and which we hope will become a model for the future of the
internet.
Corporate Freedom of Speech is one of our most precious
Freedoms. Our ability to buy advertising, trademark our brands
and images and slogans, commission science and opinion polls,
and to create public communications tools like this website
guarantees our ability to shape the information space we call the
internet. It allows us to talk about values, about being a good
neighbor, and to focus public attention on comforting words and
images when they need them most.
We invest a great deal of our corporate value in countering
image erosion. Image erosion results from reports of alleged harm
caused by our products, and those of our subsidiary Union
Carbide. Over the years, our Freedom of Speech has allowed us
to insulate our value chain from such unfortunate
communications problems as Agent Orange, DDT, and the range of
Union Carbide liabilities we inherited when we took over that
entity -- including issues like asbestos and the
lamentable deaths of 20,000 people in Bhopal.
To our knowledge, Verio did not shut, and will not be shutting
down, any major corporate website with its closure of Thing.net. This is an
important point. While we may regret that the "artists,
activists" and others using Thing.net have been evicted from
the web, we firmly believe that those who violate the right to
Corporate Free Speech have no place on a commercial network
like the internet.
It's another example of our committment to Living. Improved Daily.
With an internet shaped by Corporate Free Speech.
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