What's new

India Leads the World in Facebook Censorship

scholseys

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Dec 28, 2011
Messages
6,429
Reaction score
-13
Country
Bangladesh
Location
Canada
India Leads the World in Facebook Censorship - Businessweek
India Leads the World in Facebook Censorship
By Joshua Brustein April 11, 2014
Facebook (FB) published its second transparency report on Friday morning, and this one includes more than just instances of governments seeking information about social network users. Now Facebook also reveals times when governments restrict access to content because it violates local laws. As an example, Facebook cites German laws against Holocaust denial. Sure enough, German authorities asked Facebook to restrict such content 84 times in the last six months of 2013.

But by far the most censorious government was India, where Facebook said authorities restricted content 4,765 times. India’s approach to Internet speech has been a flash point for years, with the government saying it wants to regulate content that is offensive to religious or ethnic groups, and companies such as Facebook and Google (GOOG) bristling at the restrictions. Turkey also ranks high on the list, which is unsurprising given its recent attempts to restrict Twitter (TWTR) use.

Here’s who is asking for content to be removed, and how often they’re doing it:

Content Restriction Requests on Facebook
India: 4,765
Turkey: 2,014
Pakistan: 162
Israel: 113
Germany: 84
France: 80
Austria: 78
Australia 48
United Arab Emirates: 12
Italy: 5
Russia: 4
United Kingdom: 3
Bangladesh: 3
In large part the countries asking for information were the same ones asking for material to be taken down. Of the eight countries issuing the most requests for user information, six of them also asked that some content be taken down locally. The exceptions were the U.S. and Brazil, whose governments are very curious but apparently not so censorious.

Facebook says it’s not permitted to reveal how often the requests are granted and notes that it doesn’t automatically accede to government requests for local censorship. “Facebook’s mission is to give people the power to share, and to make the world more open and connected. Sometimes, the laws of a country interfere with that mission, by limiting what can be shared there,” wrote Colin Stretch, the company’s general counsel, in a blog post accompanying the report. “When we receive a government request seeking to enforce those laws, we review it with care, and, even where we conclude that it is legally sufficient, we only restrict access to content in the requesting country. We do not remove content from our service entirely unless we determine that it violates our community standards.”

This is the first time Facebook has released data on such requests, so it’s just a snapshot of a single period. Twitter, on the other hand, has been releasing similar information for several years. Twitter took a lot of criticism when it said in 2012 it would grant some government requests to restrict content that violated local laws. Governments are asking Twitter to restrict content with increasing frequency, up ninefold in the last six months of 2013 compared with the same period the year before. Still, these requests to Twitter are much less frequent than those made to Facebook. In the last six months of 2013, all the governments of the world asked Twitter to restrict content 377 times. Interestingly, Brazil’s government made the most requests, despite letting Facebook be.

Unlike Facebook, Twitter tells how often it actually restricts content. For its most recent report, it did so 11 percent of the time. That adds up to 191 tweets that people didn’t see. In the majority of cases, the people not seeing them were French.
 
India Leads the World in Facebook Censorship - Businessweek
India Leads the World in Facebook Censorship
By Joshua Brustein April 11, 2014


But by far the most censorious government was India, where Facebook said authorities restricted content 4,765 times. India’s approach to Internet speech has been a flash point for years, with the government saying it wants to regulate content that is offensive to religious or ethnic groups, and companies such as Facebook and Google (GOOG) bristling at the restrictions. Turkey also ranks high on the list, which is unsurprising given its recent attempts to restrict Twitter (TWTR) use.
.


Nothing new here.....the GoI needs to make sure that religious violence wont spread through the internet....
 
I always wondered, why doesn't India just ban these Western sites for "security reasons," and then start you own?

Chinese social media and search engines are so powerful now days, the head of these companies are invited to meetings with foreign head of states.


These companies today are each worth in the tens of billions US.

India could really benefit from that. Why let foreigners earn Indian cash.
 
I always wondered, why doesn't India just ban these Western sites for "security reasons," and then start you own?

Chinese social media and search engines are so powerful now days, the head of these companies are invited to meetings with foreign head of states.


These companies today are each worth in the tens of billions US.

India could really benefit from that. Why let foreigners earn Indian cash.

We cant do that you know.India's major exports is IT and Its enabled services,softwares etc.All companies in this world especially west companies Indian software in one way or another.Facebook also use our softwares.So we cant shutdown them from our country.India's software exports worth 100billion$.Even if we created our own system people still prefer that.
 
Exactly.

I support this move.

Many countries around the world have good reason for doing it.

Censorship is not a bad thing...

Unless if you try to block US propaganda to overthrow your government, or supporting separatism. Then you will be punished as a country lack of freedom of speech and press. Censorship is the symbol of the evilness and why your country should be invaded!
 
:lol:democracy and free speech
You might not say that if you knew what kinda of information was censored.
I am sure you would have been again jumping on your rear if India allowed that content. If I have to give you an example of the data its like the "infamous carton about a prophet of one religion." Now do tell us you want it to be censored or not.
 
Good, having free speech doesn't mean we should provide every retard in the streets with a mic.
 
Surprised not to see Sri Lanka on there, they are very good at oppressing there own citizens.
 
Back
Top Bottom