February 12, 2021
News
Who decides what stays on the Internet?
January 12, 2021
In the aftermath of the attack on the U.S. Capitol. The Verge invited Daphne Keller, director of the Program on Platform Regulation at Stanford’s Cyber Policy Center, to join the
For platform regulation Congress should use a European cheat sheet
January 15, 2021
Platform regulation has a real shot at passage this cycle of the U.S. Congress. After a year of “unserious, undemocratic and unconstitutional” proposals to reform Section 230 of the Communications
Mexican president mounts campaign against social media bans
January 15, 2021
President Andrés Manuel López Obrador of Mexico vowed to lead an international effort to combat what he considers censorship by social media companies that have blocked or suspended the accounts
Social media liability law is likely to be reviewed under Biden
January 18, 2021
Section 230 became a favorite punching bag of President Trump’s in the past year. But the law’s days may be numbered even though Joe Biden will be president. Democrats also
Turkey slaps ad ban on Twitter under new social media law
January 18, 2021
Ankara has imposed advertising bans on Twitter, Periscope and Pinterest after they failed to appoint local representatives in Turkey under a new social media law, according to decisions published on
A Hong Kong Website Gets Blocked, Raising Censorship Fears
January 26, 2021
Users of major mobile carriers can no longer access a service that detailed the personal information of police officers, a possible sign that the city is turning to tactics used
Google opens Dublin hub to tackle harmful online content
January 27, 2021
Google opened a centre to tackle harmful online content, in a move also designed to ease regulatory concerns about how the company and other tech giants police a growing problem
Pakistan to ‘review’ controversial internet censorship rules
January 26, 2021
Rules passed in November set broad parameters for the country’s internet regulator to censor online content. Pakistan’s government says it will review the regulations that rights groups have decried as
Biden’s Commerce nominee backs changes to Section 230
January 26, 2021
In a hearing on her nomination for Commerce Department secretary on Tuesday, Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo told lawmakers that she will pursue changes to Section 230 if confirmed. Biden
Ugandan networks block The Elephant news website before election
January 21, 2021
Several Ugandan internet networks blocked Kenya-based news website The Elephant in mid-December 2020, according to the site’s publisher, John Githongo, who spoke to CPJ via messaging app in January 2021,
Territorial limitation of data protection law and the “right to be forgotten” in Hong Kong
February 5, 2021
The “right to be forgotten” has been central to the global debate over the balance between individual privacy and freedom of information and of the media in recent years. Such
Twitter Unblocked Accounts That Criticized India’s Government. Now, Its Employees Are Being Threatened With Jail Time Unless It Blocks Them Again.
February 3, 2021
India’s government has threatened to punish employees at Twitter with fines and jail terms of up to seven years for restoring hundreds of accounts it has ordered the company to
Supreme Court of India Issues Notice to Centre on Plea for Social Media Regulation Law
February 1, 2021
The Supreme Court of India sought responses from the Centre and others on a plea seeking framing of a law to regulate social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter, and
Russia: Social Media Pressured to Censor Posts
February 5, 2021
Russian authorities are escalating pressure on social media companies, forcing them to censor online content deemed illegal by the government, according to Human Rights Watch. Social media platforms have received
Myanmar blocks Twitter and Instagram
February 6, 2021
The Myanmar Ministry of Transport and Communications ordered mobile networks and internet service providers in the country to block Twitter and Instagram, according to Norwegian company Telenor, which offers mobile
Entries
Mexican Federal Law for Protection of Industrial Property (IP)
Amendments to various provisions of the Mexican Federal Copyright Law were approved to conform to the dispositions of our new Free Trade Agreement named United States, Mexico and Canada Agreement