Archive for the ‘Censorship’ Category

Facebook censorship has increased 19% in the past 6 months

Image: Luke Leonard/Mashable

By Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai2014-11-04 22:35:15 UTC

Now more than ever, governments around the world are eager to get their hands on data about Facebook users and now more than ever, they want to remove content disappear from the social network.

Global surveillance requests for Facebook user data in the first half of 2014 increased 24% from the second half of 2013, according to the social network's transparency report revealed on Tuesday. A total of 34,946 requests were made between January and June, including messages, IP addresses and account information. Censorship also increased worldwide; compared to the June through December 2013, the amount of content censored on Facebook increased by 19%, according to the report.

Facebook is not the only service that has seen such a sharp increase in surveillance requests and censorship. In September, Google revealed that requests for user data had increased 15% compared to the previous six months, meaning a 150% increase over five years.

In a blog post accompanying the company's third such report, Facebook said that it doesn't accept every single request for user data or request to restrict content.

"As weve said before, we scrutinize every government request we receive for legal sufficiency under our terms and the strict letter of the law, and push back hard when we find deficiencies or are served with overly broad requests," Chris Sonderby, deputy general counsel at Facebook, wrote.

The company also disclosed the number of requests related to national security received by the U.S. government.

The data closed is only available in broad ranges, thanks to government restrictions on companies' transparency. For example, between Jan. 1 and June 30, Facebook received between 0 and 999 National Security Letters (NSLs); the company is not permitted to disclose the precise number. There is no data in this report about NSA-related requests, technically referred to as Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) requests, since Facebook is required to wait six months before releasing such data.

Other companies, including Google, Yahoo, LinkedIn and Microsoft have the same constraints when reporting requests related to national security, thanks to a deal that the companies struck with the U.S. government in January. Twitter, on the other hand, recently sued the U.S. government to push for these restrictions to be lifted.

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Facebook censorship has increased 19% in the past 6 months

Planes: Fire & Rescue | Unnecessary Censorship | Censored Parody Video – Video


Planes: Fire Rescue | Unnecessary Censorship | Censored Parody Video
I hope you enjoyed watching this censorship video for "Planes: Fire Rescue". I definitely enjoyed making it! If you like my videos, don #39;t forget to leave a like and subscribe. These take...

By: iFunnyProductions

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Planes: Fire & Rescue | Unnecessary Censorship | Censored Parody Video - Video

Zen room 2 November 2014 2nd attempt due to youtube censorship – Video


Zen room 2 November 2014 2nd attempt due to youtube censorship
Zen room 2 November 2014 2nd attempt due to youtube censorship.

By: mark a man

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Zen room 2 November 2014 2nd attempt due to youtube censorship - Video

Russia Media Censorship: Radio station Echo of Moscow warned for Donetsk airport reports – Video


Russia Media Censorship: Radio station Echo of Moscow warned for Donetsk airport reports
Russian radio station Ekho Moskvy has received a warning from Russia #39;s media regulator after airing a programme which the regulator said contained infomration, "justifying practices of war...

By: UKRAINE TODAY

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Russia Media Censorship: Radio station Echo of Moscow warned for Donetsk airport reports - Video

The worst form of censorship is killing journalists – Pakistan – DAWN.COM

LAHORE: Censorship in Pakistan appears in many forms, but of them is the worst is: intimidating, threatening, torturing and even killing journalists.

Media analyst Adnan Rehmat said this at a seminar on Media Ethics in the Time of Threat on Thursday. The seminar was held by Rozans Secretariat of Pakistan Coalition for Ethical Journalism with the Digital Rights Foundation and the Human Right Commission of Pakistan.

Also read: Journalists murder

Mr Rehmat said censorship today had become much worse than ever when even cable operators who were not content producers could easily block out channels on their own.

He read out excerpts from his book Reporting Under Threat, where the compelling personal accounts of three journalists were highlighted. Later these journalists -- Shumaila Jafary (BBC), Rana Azeem (PFUJ), and Yousuf Ali (The News) spoke as part of a panel.

Mr Rehmat said telling stories was important as they helped us understand what the ground reality was. The job of journalists is to tell these stories but they faced several dangers in uncovering these stories.

A free media is intrinsic of an open society and a democracy, where people can freely communicate and air their opinions and issues, he said. Unfortunately, he said, journalists were threatened commonly by non-state actors and sometimes by the government too in different ways, and when in 2002 UNESCO recorded that 612 journalists were killed globally, of them 10 per cent belonged to Pakistan.

Only in 2014, over 100 journalists have been killed, and this is just the tip of the iceberg, he said.

But no one from the public knows about this much, nor do they know the inner professional lives of these journalists and how they work under threat, he said, explaining the purpose of his book.

He said the killing of journalists was a direct attack on the State and on democracy.

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The worst form of censorship is killing journalists - Pakistan - DAWN.COM