Archive for the ‘Censorship’ Category

TikTok says its committed to diversity its history of censorship says otherwise – The Next Web

TikTok has admitted to censoring LGBTQ hashtags in some countries as part of its efforts to localize content moderation.

Following a report by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, which highlighted a list of hashtags shadow-banned in Bosnia, Jordan, and Russia, TikTok has insisted it was merely complying with local laws and not actively targeting the LGBTQ community.

The Australian think-tank said restricted terms included:

While TikTok blameslimiting the exposure of LGBTQ content on local laws, it also added that it blocked some terms because they were used to discover pornographic content. It further claimed some English phrases and some compound phrases in Arabic were wrongly moderated, but the company says it has since fixed that.

TheBBC notesTikTok has also dismissed some of the supposedly blocked hashtags laid out by the Australian think-tank, arguing content didnt show up for them since no creator on the platform had ever used them.

We believe that accountability and transparency are essential to facilitating trust with our community, TikTok said in a statement, addressing the criticism. As part of this, weve committed to making our moderation policies, algorithm, and data security practices available to experts, which no other company in our space has been willing to do.

The report is the latest in a long line of censorship claims levied against TikTok. Earlier this year, the Guardian reported the company supposedly outlawed content mentioning Trump, Christianity, or LGBTQ issues in some countries. The company was also accused of suppressing content from people with disabilities and those it deemed ugly, poor, or fat.

The company continues to insist its committed to diversity and inclusion (TikTok did donate $3 million to LGBTQ-friendly causesearlier this year), but its checkered censorship record makes it tough to take its words seriously.

On the other hand, TikTok is just another technology giant that has willingly buckled to local laws in order to expand its global presence. A few years back, Google (which has its own history of suppressing content across the political spectrum)built a whole new version of YouTube just so it can seduce the government of Pakistan into letting it operate within the country.

That doesnt make TikToks actions any less reprehensible, but it does underline the only principle tech giants are guided by: growth at all costs. Diversity and inclusion? Thats just a hot publicity stunt tactic for most corporates.

Read next: Stop giving your co-workers vapid compliments

See the original post here:
TikTok says its committed to diversity its history of censorship says otherwise - The Next Web

I think censorship shouldnt be decided by an external body: Shweta – Hindustan Times

Actor Shweta Tripathi has always chosen to tread the path that many otherwise would not choose to venture into. Be it her breakout film Masaan in 2015 or the experimental film Haraamkhor in 2017, Tripathis choices have been lauded by the audiences and the critics. Moreover, the actor is an active participant in the citys theatre circuit and her last production Timeloss, directed by Akarsh Khurana had a digital premier, too. More than the medium, what is really important to me is the story - what were saying and who the character is, she explains forms the crux of her choices.

The actor adds that thanks to her initial films, she understood the parameters with which one should choose his/her scripts. In my opinion, pushing the envelope means trying out something new. Showing the audience something they havent seen before. It doesnt need to be complex, it could be anything from emotions to using environmentally friendly props and sets, says the actor.

Moreover, Tripathi, who has dabbled with all three major formats of performing arts films, OTT and theatre, says the varying censorship guidelines should make one understand the importance of responsibilities. Art reflects society and vice versa. So it is important to be responsible for the art youre creating, and the things its saying but the story is most important, she says.

She adds that censorship in any form is challenging. I think censorship shouldnt be decided by an external body but we, as artists, should take the responsibility on ourselves. The audience learns a lot from what they see in the entertainment world. The freedom to tell our stories is always great, but we should also understand the responsibility that comes with it, she concludes.

View post:
I think censorship shouldnt be decided by an external body: Shweta - Hindustan Times

Trump slams Twitter for using Section 230 to censor conservatives – New York Post

President Trump took to Twitter Tuesday to slam the social media platform and others in biased Big Tech for using Section 230 to leave up disparaging content against conservatives, while censoring conservative speech.

Why does Twitter leave phony pictures like this up, but take down Republican/Conservative pictures and statements that are true? the commander-in-chief tweeted Tuesday morning.

The tweet included a picture of the viral Moscow Mitch meme, which took the internet by storm in mid-2019 when Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) blocked an election security bill.

McConnell, known for his sense of humor about political attacks and nicknames, was particularly incensed at the Moscow Mitch moniker, given his congressional history of being a Russia hawk.

Mitch must fight back and repeal Section 230, immediately. Stop biased Big Tech before they stop you! Trump continued in his tweet, referencing the majority leader.

Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act provides tech companies with liability protections against illegal content posted by third-party users.

In May, the Justice Department released a 25-page proposal on its website in which it recommended curbing protections that tech platforms have enjoyed for the last two dozen years.

That proposal came amid criticism, including from Trump, that large social media companies censor conservative voices while letting other controversial material, including some criminal content, run amok.

That same month, the president signed an executive order curtailing Section 230 that mostly focused on how platforms moderate content as some companies faced accusations of censorship.

Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube wield immense, if not unprecedented, power to shape the interpretation of public events; to censor, delete, or disappear information; and to control what people see or do not see, the commander-in-chiefs order stated.

We must seek transparency and accountability from online platforms, and encourage standards and tools to protect and preserve the integrity and openness of American discourse and freedom of expression.

View original post here:
Trump slams Twitter for using Section 230 to censor conservatives - New York Post

Trump Health Officials Reportedly Tried to Censor Faucis COVID Messaging – Vanity Fair

White House officials are advising Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nations top infectious disease expert, to promote messages that prioritize political positions over scientific findings, an attempt to bolster Donald Trumps misleading claims about the coronavirus. The pressure is apparently coming from Paul Alexander, a Trump appointee at the Department of Health and Human Services who, in emails reported by Politico, has repeatedly tried to edit Faucis planned responses to outlets including Bloomberg News, BuzzFeed, HuffPost, and the science journal Cell. Just this week, Alexander reportedly sent a message to Faucis press team urging him not to promote mask-wearing by children in an MSNBC interview.

Can you ensure Dr. Fauci indicates masks are for the teachers in schools. Not for children, Alexander wrote. There is no data, none, zero, across the entire world, that shows children especially young children, spread this virus to other children, or to adults or to their teachers. None. And if it did occur, the risk is essentially zero, he said, addingwithout evidencethat children take influenza home but do not take COVID home. The advice prompted long email threads between Alexander and some of Faucis aides pushing back against the misleading claims. Alexander is a senior adviser to Michael Caputo, an ally of the president who currently oversees HHSs media strategy and who said in a statement that he hired Dr. Alexander for his expertise and not to simply resonate others opinions.

While Alexanders messages are couched as scientific arguments, Politico notes, they often contradict mainstream science while amplifying controversial positions the president has taken on topics such as school reopening and the risk coronavirus poses to children. On August 27, Alexander objected to a press-office summary of what Fauci was expected to tell a Bloomberg reporter. I continue to have an issue with kids getting tested and repeatedly and even university students in a widespread mannerand I disagree with Dr. Fauci on this. Vehemently, Alexander wrote in an email.

Fauci told Politico he had not seen the emails, nor had his staff advised him to minimize the risk coronavirus poses to kids or the need for mask-wearing. No one tells me what I can say and cannot say, Fauci said. I speak on scientific evidence, a point he reiterated in a pair of interviews on Friday. Asked by CNNs Wolf Blitzer whether the public should listen to Fauci or Trumpwho on Thursday claimed were rounding the corner of the pandemicFauci remarked, You dont have to listen to any individual if you look at the data. The data speak for themselves, he said. Were still getting up to 40,000 new infections a day and 1,000 deaths. That is what you look at. Look at the science, the evidence and the data and you can make a pretty easy conclusion."

Fauci also cited the data to MSNBCs Andrea Mitchell when she asked about the administrations contradictory messages, with Fauci telling Americans to hunker down and get through this fall and winterwhen the pandemic is likely to worsen againthe same day that Trump suggested the worst is past. Im sorry, but I have to disagree with that, Fauci said of the presidents comments, noting the disturbing statistics and increased test positivity in some parts of the country that come as people begin to move indoors due to colder weather.

That's not good for a respiratory-borne virus. You dont want to start off already with a baseline thats so high, Fauci said. The country needs to get the levels down, he warned, so that when you go into a more precarious situation, like the fall and the winter, you wont have a situation where you really are at a disadvantage right from the very beginning.

We are still in the middle of this, he told Blitzer.

More Great Stories From Vanity Fair

Melania Trump Sounds a Lot Like Her Husband in Stephanie Winston Wolkoffs New Book How Trumps Handling of White Supremacists Could Create a Homegrown Crisis Ashley Etienne May Be Bidens Deadliest Weapon Against Trump Whats the Reality Behind Netflix Hit Selling Sunset? How to Abolish the Police, According to Josie Duffy Rice The Pandemic Is Creating an Endless Summer in the Hamptons From the Archive: The Perks and Perils of Being Donald Trumps Daughter

Looking for more? Sign up for our daily Hive newsletter and never miss a story.

See more here:
Trump Health Officials Reportedly Tried to Censor Faucis COVID Messaging - Vanity Fair

Artists of the World, Unite Against Chinese-Driven Cultural Paralysis – Foreign Policy

Heard about the new James Bond movie, soon going into production, which features a Chinese hacker who manages to penetrate the northeastern United States electric grid?

Thought so. It is not actually in production, nor is it ever going to be. From now on, entertainment may feature American villains, Russian villains, evil Iranians, Germans, and cops, but there wont be a new Dr. No. Chinese censors wouldnt like it, so why bother trying? Attempts to stay on Chinas good side have gone so far that in its new live-action version of the movie Mulan, Disney even credits the Turpan Public Security Bureau, an institution that helps operate Uighur internment camps.

Such behavior is not just demeaning to the artists involved, its harmful to democracy. And although the Chinese censors are mighty, they can be defeated through collective action. Artists of the world, unite!

For the past several years, a specter has been haunting Europe, North America, Japan, South Korea, and many other democratically ruled lands: censorship. Beijing has done its best to strengthen that ghost through its various weapons for controlling the media: its State Film Administration, State Administration of Radio and Television, and State Administration of Press and Publication; the China Film Group Corporation; the China Film Co-Production Corporation; and the Central Committee Publicity Department.

Two years ago, Disney, the powerful studio now humbly thanking an arm of the Chinese government, was seemingly unaware of Beijings reach. When Disney released Christopher Robin, a live-action version of the beloved Winnie the Pooh stories, it found the film mysteriously blocked from the 1.4 billion viewers in the Chinese market. Christopher Robin featured no subtle mention of Tibet, no Chinese villain in the Hundred Acre Wood. The likely problem? Winnie the Pooh happens to look a lot like Chinese President Xi Jinping, which caused merriment after enterprising Chinese Internet users posted images of the two.

Tinseltown has learned to be more circumspect, as the nonprofit PEN America detailed in a recent report. Hollywood studios increasingly see access to China as a prerequisite for their movies financial success, PEN noted. Given that Chinas movie market overtook the United States for a quarter in 2018, thats entirely logical. But Hollywood cant bring movies to China the way it does to, say, Switzerland or India. If it wants movies released in China, it needs to please the countrys censors. Failing to do that can be the difference between a black and a red bottom line. In turn, Beijing bureaucrats can demand changes to Hollywood moviesor expect Hollywood insiders to anticipate and make these changes, unprompted, according to PEN America.

As a result, the censors usually dont even need to ply their trade. The moviemakers try their hardest to anticipate what may encounter disapprovaland that means a lot of sanitizing just in case. The trailer for a forthcoming Top Gun sequel, for example, shows Tom Cruise wearing his familiar bomber jacket, but with the flags of Taiwan and Japan altered. Richard Gerea public supporter of Tibethas said hes losing movie roles. And when the director of Seven Years in Tibet, Jean-Jacques Annaud, was recently given a new movie to direct, he published a Chinese-language penitential blog post so obsequious that it could have been written during a show trial. I have always respected the rules of international conventions that acknowledge that Tibet is a part of Chinese territory, Annaud swore.

The artistic harm is not limited to movies. When the Swedish pop star Zara Larsson announced earlier this summer that she had ended her sponsorship deal with Huawei because China is not a nice government, her songs swiftly disappeared from Apple in China. But none of Larssons fellow pop stars came to her rescue. Why should they? Theyve got their own income to protect. Too bad for those other artists who are either so naive or so foolhardy that they dare criticize the country that can fill their bank accounts.

But invisible censorship leads to a life led in fear, not to mention creative paralysis. Partial paralysis has already set in, thanks to the United States own outsized role in cultural production. Last year, the majority of the 20 top-grossing movies were American. Stars of music and film alike are adopting American themes, expressions, and language. Wang Ju, known as Chinas Beyonc, raps in Chinese and English. The Eurovision Song Contests top songs are now sung in English even though the United Kingdom is a minimal (and rather embarrassing) presence. The breadth of other countries cultures deserves more attention in pop culture. But Chinas censors are not going to liberate the world from Hollywood creep. On the contrary, theyre a foe mightier even than Hollywood. It is high time for artists to openly publish their views on censorship and offer a manifesto of artistic freedom.

That means: Artists of the world, unite! Unite even though income from China is alluring, especially with the global entertainment market expected to shrink by 6 percent this year. Dont abandon Pooh Bear simply because he happens to look like Xi. Make a movie about Tibet, Hong Kong booksellers, or Uighur reeducation camp inmates if you like, not to demean Beijing but because its compelling cinematic material. Hire Gere if hes right for the role. Speak up for Larsson, who dares to say what everyone should have said. By all means, be apolitical as well when it suits. But kowtowing is no guarantee against eventually finding oneself frozen out.

China may be one of the worlds biggest entertainment markets, but artists in the West are among the biggest creators. If they were to stop showing their movies in Chinese cinemas, performing at Chinese arenas, and selling their songs to smartphone users in Chinaif the NBA were to stop playing in China to point out that Beijing has no right to censor NBA managers views on Hong Kongit would be Beijing that would have to contend with a very large number of unhappy people.

For the past few years, Beijing has singled out Sweden as its favorite bullying victim, with the countrys ambassador to Sweden comparing his host countrys media to a lightweight boxer versus China, the heavyweight, and threatening consequences over a literary reward given to a Hong Kong bookseller with Swedish nationality. But when it comes to pop music, Sweden is the heavyweight boxer. Its many producersthink of Max Martin and Shellbackare the best in the world. Only Paul McCartney and John Lennon have written more Billboard No. 1 hits than Martin. Taylor Swift, Ed Sheeran, and Ariana Grande are all his collaborators. His protg, Shellback, boasts a similarly impressive rsum that includes Katy Perry and the Jonas Brothers.

The West shouldnt lecture other countries or demand that they conform to its way of life. But if the governments of those countries want access to Western societies, the deal includes accepting mentions of free Tibet and images of Winnie the Pooh. Every German leader has to put up with Hitler mustaches drawn onto pictures of them. Even Russian President Vladimir Putin permits Russian translations of books critical of his country. It would be wrong for Western leaders to read Xi the Riot Act on freedom of expression, but if artists unite rather than trying to maximize their individual advantage, they have a chance of succeeding. If it were Martin versus Xi, its clear who people would root for.

Read the rest here:
Artists of the World, Unite Against Chinese-Driven Cultural Paralysis - Foreign Policy