WASHINGTON: Google, Facebook and Twitter, breaking with the usual  practice of corporate silence, are speaking out forcefully against the  Internet blockade by the Egyptian authorities.
As Egypt is rocked  by continuing protests against President Hosni Mubarak, the three  companies spawned by the Internet have criticized the attempt by the  authorities to sever the nation of 80 million people from the Web.
While  corporate responsibility has been a front-burner issue since companies  were pressured into cutting ties with apartheid South Africa decades  ago, experts said the statements and moves by the three Web giants were  unusual.
"Usually with most corporations the issue is what's  going to make profits,  not necessarily what's going to do good for the  world," said Benjamin Hermalin a finance professor at the University of  California, Berkeley's Haas School of Business.
"Particularly  given a situation of political uncertainty it would be very strange for  companies to take bets on one side because if the other side wins  they're in deep trouble," Hermalin said.
The uncertainty in Egypt  did not stop Facebook, which had about five million active users in the  country before the Internet shutdown, from issuing a statement saying  that "no one should be denied access to the Internet."
"Although  the turmoil in Egypt is a matter for the Egyptian people and their  government to resolve, limiting Internet access for millions of people  is a matter of concern for the global community," Facebook spokesman  Andrew Noyes said.
Google and Twitter went considerably further  than merely expressing concern, jointly creating a tool to allow  Egyptians to bypass the Internet closure and post messages to Twitter by  making telephone calls.
Google said the "Speak to Tweet"  service, which turns voice messages into "tweets," was aimed at "helping  people in Egypt stay connected at this very difficult time."
Google-owned  YouTube also highlighted videos from Egypt on its news and politics  channel, CitizenTube, invited users to submit their own and began  streaming live coverage of broadcasts by the Al Jazeera television  network.
Google also created a "Crisis Response" page featuring  links to the "Speak to Tweet" tool, CitizenTube, emergency telephone  numbers and Google Maps of where protests have been occurring in Egypt.
Michael  Connor, editor and publisher of the online magazine Business Ethics,  noted that Google, whose motto is "Don't Be Evil," has taken stands  previously, refusing to censor Internet search results in China, for  example.
At the same time, Connor said Google, Facebook and  Twitter were also acting out of self-interest.