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Archive for the 'censorship' Category...

Filed under censorship

An anonymous reader writes to tell us about Yaman Salahi, a UC Berkeley student and blogger, who lost a lawsuit brought against him by Lee Kaplan, a journalist for FrontPageMag.com. Kaplan had sued Salahi in California small claims court for tortious business interference and libel, in response to a blog Salahi had set up about him called “Lee Kaplan Watch.” Salahi lost in small claims court and then lost an “appeal” — which is essentially a retrial by another small-claims judge. No written opinion was offered with either decision, though all other court filings are available. From Salahi’s update on his blog: “…because [Kaplan] sued me in small claims court, I did not have the protections of the anti-SLAPP [Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Policy] statute… I will never know why I lost the initial hearing, or why I lost the appeal, because small claims judges are not obligated to release [...]

Original post by kdawson and software by Elliott Back

Comments (0) Posted by on Saturday, June 16th, 2007

Filed under censorship

slashthedot writes “In another instance of censorship against websites about anything anti-establishment in China, Flickr, popular among a growing class of digital photo enthusiasts in the world’s second-largest Internet market, has not shown photos to users in mainland China since last week, amid rumors Beijing took action after images of the Tiananmen massacre in early June 1989 were posted. “It is our understanding that Flickr users in China are not able to see images on Flickr, and we have confirmed that this is not a technical issue on our end,” a spokeswoman for Yahoo Hong Kong said in an email in response to a Reuters inquiry.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by CmdrTaco and software by Elliott Back

Comments (0) Posted by on Wednesday, June 13th, 2007

Filed under censorship

Matthew Skala writes “The BBC reports that Yahoo! has rejected a shareholder proposal to adopt an anti-censorship policy, as well as one to set up a human rights committee to review the impact of Yahoo!’s operations in places like China. The interesting proposals are numbers 6 and 7 in the proxy statement available through EDGAR. This news comes on the heels of jailed Chinese reporter Shi Tao, suing Yahoo! for its involvement in his conviction, and Google’s rejection of a similar proposal. The anti-censorship proposal was submitted by the same groups (several New York City pension funds) as the Google proposal. The proxy statement also includes the Board’s recommendations — “strongly oppose[ing]” both proposals — with explanations of their reasoning.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by CmdrTaco and software by Elliott Back

Comments (0) Posted by on Wednesday, June 13th, 2007

Filed under censorship

starkravingmad writes “The Economic Times is running a story on Hindu nationalists in India threatening to wreck internet cafes that don’t block parts of Orkut that the vigilantes find offensive. From the article: ‘”Orkut is used by many destructive elements to spread canards about India, Hindus, our gods and cultural heritage,” said Abhijit Phanse, president of Bharatiya Vidyarthi Sena, the student group. “We are gently telling Internet cafe owners that it is their responsibility to see that surfers do not use their facility to carry out such hate campaigns … Or else, we will have to do that job for them.” Last week, dozens of Shiv Sena workers vandalised some Internet centres, saying they were not stopping their customers from accessing Orkut groups involved in sending hate messages.’”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Original post by Zonk and software by Elliott Back

Comments (0) Posted by on Sunday, June 10th, 2007

Filed under censorship

An anonymous reader writes “It would appear that the Chinese government is currently censoring all photos on the site Flickr. A notice has been posted in a Flickr help forum about this, but the service currently doesn’t have a fix for this. It would appear that China has turned on their Golden Shield Project to censor the site. ‘Jain Hua Li, a spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, said he hadn’t heard of Flickr until told about it in a conversation with a Chronicle reporter, and then suggested that the blocking may be because Chinese authorities are trying to protect children from racy images. Lucie Morillon, the U.S. representative for Reporters Without Borders, a French group that promotes free expression, said that the Beijing government often censors Web sites under the guise of protecting children or national security. She called the blocking of Flickr “one more blow against the [...]

Original post by Zonk and software by Elliott Back

Comments (0) Posted by on Saturday, June 9th, 2007

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