- Global Voices Advox - https://advox.globalvoices.org -

Netizen Report: China Slaps Tech Giant Over Porn (and Politics)

Categories: China, Netizen Report

Eduardo Avila [1], Ellery Roberts Biddle [2], Lisa Ferguson [3], Michelle Fong, Hae-in Lim, Sarah Myers [4], and Bojan Perkov contributed to this report. 

Censorship with artificial light rays. Image by Niabot via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0) [5]

Censorship with artificial light rays. Image by Niabot via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)

Global Voices Advocacy's Netizen Report offers an international snapshot of challenges, victories, and emerging trends in Internet rights around the world. This week's report begins in China. Just in time for World Press Freedom Day [6], state-run newspaper People’s Daily ran an editorial [7] [zh] highlighting the Internet’s “negative effects and hidden security dangers” and asking, “if you don’t have Internet order, how can you have Internet freedom?”

To show they mean business [8], the State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television revoked some online publishing licenses [9] from Sina, one of China’s largest Internet firms [10], on grounds that the company was providing platforms for the distribution of pornographic content. Some netizens believe [11] Sina is being targeted not for porn infractions, but because of the popularity of Weibo, the leading microblogging platform operated by Sina.

Alongside punishments aimed at Sina, more than 3,300 blogs, WeChat accounts and forums have been seized or suspended [12] and more than 20 literature websites [13] have been “disciplined” as part of the campaign. Gaming companies are also feeling the crackdown: Southern Metropolis Daily reported that [14] some web game companies have been notified by authorities that game characters are no longer allowed to expose sensitive body parts, or to wear short sleeves, shorts or bikinis.

Thuggery: Bloggers, translators remain detained in Ethiopia

A group of press freedom and human rights organizations called upon the African Commission and United Nations to intervene in the cases of nine journalists detained in Ethiopia in late April. The Global Voices community released a statement [15] calling for the release of the journalists, four of whom are Global Voices translators. To get involved [16], or to sign the statement, click here [17].

Free Expression: Malaysian Minister says too many newspapers could confuse people

In Malaysia, popular independent news websites FZ Daily [18] and Malaysiakini [19] were denied permission [20] to print newspapers on the basis of government claims that the websites practice “controversial and sensational” journalism in order to attract readers. According to Free Malaysia Today [21], Home Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said the decision is aimed at protecting the public from becoming confused by “too many news being published by all sorts of newspapers.”

A US State Department official promised [22] six Vietnamese bloggers that the United States would put Internet freedom on the agenda of the upcoming bilateral human rights dialogue with the one-party communist state, whose per-capita blogger detention rate is second only to China’s. The blogger-activists also importuned the US government to champion freedom of expression in the context of the ongoing trade negotiations for the 12-country Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement that could have adverse effects on digital access to information, among other things.

Privacy: Of badgers and loons

Yahoo may have ditched [23] Do Not Track, but EFF just did them one better with Privacy Badger [24], a browser-add on tool that analyzes sites to detect and block third-party tracking. Privacy Badger is still in its alpha stage, but EFF is inviting savvy users to test the tool and report bugs at Github.

Citizen Lab’s Christopher Parsons proposed a few approaches [25] Canadians can take if they want to learn whether their communications companies are disclosing their personal information to state agencies.

Netizen Activism: Bolivia’s Internet moving at a snail’s pace

Digital activists in Cochabamba, Bolivia took to the streets [26] on Saturday May 3, dressed as snails [27] [es] to represent the slow Internet speeds faced by users across the country. The grassroots movement “Más y Mejor Internet Para Bolivia [28]” [es] (More and Better Internet for Bolivia) has been calling for lower prices, faster speeds, and better coverage from all telcos.

Publications and Studies

Subscribe to the Netizen Report by email [34]