Archive for the ‘Censorship’ Category

Tunisia media commission resigns

5 July 2012 Last updated at 00:47 ET

The Tunisian commission tasked with reforming the country's media has resigned, citing government censorship.

Kamel Labidi, head of The National Authority for the Reform of Information and Communication, said it "does not see the point in continuing its work".

The body was created to draft new media laws after the fall of the former regime in 2011.

But the new democratically-elected Islamist government has been accused of returning to old, repressive ways.

Referring to the recent dismissal of heads of state-owned radio and TV channels by the government, media rights watchdog Reporters Without Borders said on Tuesday:

"In the absence of clear legislation respecting international standards, senior public broadcasting personnel are being appointed in a way reminiscent of the old regime's methods."

Announcing the shutting down of the independent media commission, Kamel Labidi accused the government of failing to take any concrete action to improve press freedom and implement new media laws.

In particular, both the commission and Reporters Without Borders have expressed concern about the government's failure to implement decrees 115 and 116, which are designed to ensure the protection of journalists and provide the basis for regulating new audio-visual media.

"The body warns of the gravity of the situation in the realm of information and accuses the government of reverting to forms of censorship and disinformation," Mr Labidi said.

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Tunisia media commission resigns

Ekta Kapoor: 'Censorship ruining films like Kyaa Super Kool Hain Hum'

Rex Features / Aventurier Patrick/SIPA

The producer's latest film Kyaa Super Kool Hain Hum has faced cuts from India's film classification board.

She told The Times of India: "We never had issues in the film's first part. I think our society was so much cooler at that time. Now suddenly everyone raises a question, everyone asks 15 questions.

"So we have a sanitised, boring promo in the theatre for the ones who will be seeing Bol Bachchan.

"A-rating programming is allowed on TV after 11pm, then also we are not allowed to show anything. There is so much prohibition in society for everything and because anyone can raise a question.

"Everyone is so scared. I don't blame the censors. They are under so much pressure. People are ready to file a PIL (public interest litigation) against everything - it's really curbing the creativity."

Lead actor Tusshar Kapoor said recently that he does not think the comedy sequel is too controversial for Indian audiences.

It was reported in April that the censorship board objected to the amount of innuendo in the dialogue.

Watch the trailer for Kya Super Kool Hai Hum below:

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Ekta Kapoor: 'Censorship ruining films like Kyaa Super Kool Hain Hum'

Twitter: Government censorship rising

2012-07-03 12:41

San Francisco - Twitter said in its first "transparency report" that the number of government requests for user information or to block content is rising in 2012.

"We've received more government requests in the first half of 2012, as outlined in this initial dataset, than in the entirety of 2011," Twitter's legal policy manager Jeremy Kessel said in a blog post.

The overwhelming number of requests came from the US, accounting for 679 of the 849 requests for user information. In 75% of the US cases, Twitter gave some or all information.

The largest number of Twitter users are located in the US.

After the US was Japan with 98 cases and Britain and Canada with 11 each.

Copyright violations

"One of our goals is to grow Twitter in a way that makes us proud," Kessel said.

"This ideal informs many of our policies and guides us in making difficult decisions. One example is our longstanding policy to proactively notify users of requests for their account information unless we're prohibited by law."

Twitter said it received 3 378 "takedown" notices so far this year for copyright violations and removed 38% of the requested tweets.

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Twitter: Government censorship rising

Censoring social media fans flames of social unrest

Is social media censorship a means to quell a modern uprising? Some politicians and law enforcers during the political turbulence of 2011 thought so but recent research suggests that uncensored citizens experience less violence and longer periods of peace between outbursts than communities subject to censorship. These new findings appear in the Bulletin of Sociological Methodology.

A consensus is forming around Internet censorship in the wake of last year's uprisings, extending from the Arab Spring to the UK, according to Antonio Casilli, associate professor in digital humanities at Telecom ParisTech, France and Paola Tubaro, senior lecturer in economic sociology at the University of Greenwich, UK. The authors used sophisticated computer modeling to find out if the assumptions that actors' use of media such as Twitter fueled mob action through greater awareness were true. Ambiguously, current narratives among the European political establishment suggest social media can be either the tools of liberation (in developing countries) or threats to values of peace and freedom (in Western countries).

The researchers used state-of-the-art agent-based modelling as a starting point. Political conflict is often described as cumulative, involving 'escalating' conflict and sometimes ending with regime change. However, in reality, periods of relative stability punctuated with violent outbursts are more typical. Existing models include a variable called 'vision,' an individual agent's ability to scan his/her neighbourhood for signs of police officers and/or active protesters. Higher vision means greater awareness of one's surroundings and a larger range of possible actions.

In Casilli and Tubaro's computer simulation, censorship narrows down vision. It interrupts the flow of communication and decreases the ability of individuals to appreciate their environment. In this sense, censorship blinds social actors to their own context.

The researchers found that all possible scenarios led to initial outbursts of violence but how the situation evolved was significantly influenced by government social media censorship. In a total censorship scenario, similar to the Egyptian riots, violence levels remained at a maximum. Stronger censorship led to an increase in the average level of endemic violence over time.

According to the model, the "no censorship" situation at first appears bleak, with incessant, high-level violent outbursts that seem larger than in other scenarios. However, looking at average violence levels over time, the uncensored scenario still has the least aggression. Although agents protest, sometimes violently, they are able to return to relative calm for longer periods in-between. The decision to maintain peace is the choice of agents themselves, rather than due to police repression.

This research offers an interesting methodological bridge that shows how rules operating at the micro or individual level can account for collective dynamics. This is particularly interesting at a time when research is trending into two camps, either using micro-motives (such as personality, culture, and morals) or macro-indicators (such as poverty and social stratification) as explanatory factors.

"In the absence of robust indicators as to the rebelliousness of a given society, the choice of not restricting social communication turns out to be a judicious one for avoiding the surrender of democratic values and freedom of expression for an illusory sense of security," say Casilli and Tubaro.

More information: "Social Media Censorship in Times of Political Unrest - A Social Simulation Experiment with the UK Riots" by Antonio A. Casilli and Paola Tubaro, published July 02 2012 in Bulletin of Sociological Methodology. The article will be free to access for a limited time here: http://bms.sagepub.com/

Provided by SAGE Publications

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Censoring social media fans flames of social unrest

MCC in censorship row after 'great unwashed' remarks about Lord's

Lord's may be the spiritual home of cricket, but it is clearly not the home of free speech. Members of the MCC, which is based at the London cricket ground, have been banned from speaking publicly about the clubs workings.

Now, Derek Brewer, the MCCs chief executive, has told members that they will no longer be able to make comments about anything. There will no longer be forums on the Online Pavilion where members can post messages, he said. This has sometimes not reflected well on the club. Previous attempts to moderate the forums have been unsuccessful. Some members have not been receptive to moderation.

Ben Miller, a star of the BBC comedy The Armstrong & Miller Show, brings out a book next month, Its Not Rocket Science, aimed at encouraging interest in the physical world.

The comedian has discovered that although publishing may not be rocket science, it can be an awfully difficult subject. His publisher, Little, Brown, has written to book reviewers alerting them to an error. The equals sign has appeared as a minus in the initial print run, it says. This has now been rectified.

This role is murder

Kate OMara is currently appearing on stage in Agatha Christies play Murder on the Nile, but she is not impressed by her character, Helen ffoliot-ffoulkes.

She is totally implausible, complains the star of Dynasty. I dont know how to play her. All I can say is I do my best. I dont know what sort of reality Agatha Christie lived in, but but its not where I am from.

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MCC in censorship row after 'great unwashed' remarks about Lord's