Censorship

In jurisdictions around the world, there are laws or administrative practices that can be abused to censor critical voices on- and offline.

Criminal defamation laws are easily abused by authorities to limit scrutiny and to stifle public debates, and are often used against journalists reporting on controversial issues, or members of the public expressing themselves online.

Equally, laws that criminalise so-called “false news” provide public authorities with a powerful instrument to control journalistic activities: allowing public officials to decide what counts as truth is tantamount to accepting that the forces in power have a right to silence any opposition.    Like ‘hate speech’ or terrorism, the notion of “fake news” is too vague to prevent subjective and arbitrary interpretation.

Laws that seek to deal with the dissemination of unlawful content on social media also often fail to comply with international standards, by being too broad and therefore encouraging social media platforms to over-censor.

While forms of censorship have evolved with the growth of the internet as a space for expression, efforts by states to restrict the right to freedom of opinion and expression through vague and broad provisions are still a frequent occurrence.

08.05.2017 5 min read

Malaysia: Social Media Users Must Not Be Co-Opted to Censor Online Dissent

Click here to go to article
Turkey: Free Expression is not Terrorism
03.05.2017 6 min read

Turkey: Free Expression is not Terrorism

Click here to go to article
Bangladesh: Violations against journalists and online activists in 2016
02.05.2017 1 min read

Bangladesh: Violations against journalists and online activists in 2016

Click here to go to article
26.04.2017 4 min read

Germany: Draft Bill on Social Networks raises serious free expression concerns

Click here to go to article
26.04.2017 11 min read

Malaysia: Free Speech Is Far From “Thriving”

Click here to go to article
26.04.2017 3 min read

Kenya: Win for freedom of expression as penal provision declared unconstitutional

Click here to go to article
21.04.2017 4 min read

Aleksey Navalnyy v Russia: ARTICLE 19 joins amicus brief on defamation liability and hyperlinking

Click here to go to article
21.04.2017 17 min read

Denmark: Ban on blasphemy must be abolished

Click here to go to article
20.04.2017 6 min read

Status Code 451: An Internet Governance Standard to Expose Censorship

Click here to go to article