wolfigor
Emperor
After the facts of Paris and having so many people posting images from Charlie Hebdo, The government of Turkey "asked" Facebook to block all pages criticising Islam in Turkey.
Failure to comply would mean a block of the service in Turkey:
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/...in-turkey-facebook-blocks-anti-islamic-pages/
Facebook caved in as they did previously by blocking pages related to criticism of Ataturk and pages related to the Armenian genocide.
On the different side we have Youtube and Twitter that did not cave in and they were duly blocked in Turkey (it has been a long time now).
Users still access those services using proxies, VPNs, Tor, and other stuff... becoming very much aware of the repressive stance of their government.
Even the company where I work offers a service which gets blocked by repressive regimes because (as a side effect) allows users to access web sites completely anonymous and untouched by the government spying.
Saudi Arabia, Iran, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan are all blocking us... and we bear the business cost of it as a badge of honour.
We lose a sizeable amount of money for sticking to our stated principles.
It's sad to see a company like Facebook which fill its PR mouth with the social value of their social network for freedom of expression failing to upheld to their own stated principles.
At least if a service gets blocked, people in the country gets aware of it and can complain.
In a country like Turkey where there are elections it may help to move the needle.
However when companies like Facebook cave in to the state censorship and control, they de-facto become accessory to the regime especially if they share logs with those government (allowing the government to tack dissidents).
Failure to comply would mean a block of the service in Turkey:
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/...in-turkey-facebook-blocks-anti-islamic-pages/
Facebook caved in as they did previously by blocking pages related to criticism of Ataturk and pages related to the Armenian genocide.
On the different side we have Youtube and Twitter that did not cave in and they were duly blocked in Turkey (it has been a long time now).
Users still access those services using proxies, VPNs, Tor, and other stuff... becoming very much aware of the repressive stance of their government.
Even the company where I work offers a service which gets blocked by repressive regimes because (as a side effect) allows users to access web sites completely anonymous and untouched by the government spying.
Saudi Arabia, Iran, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan are all blocking us... and we bear the business cost of it as a badge of honour.
We lose a sizeable amount of money for sticking to our stated principles.
It's sad to see a company like Facebook which fill its PR mouth with the social value of their social network for freedom of expression failing to upheld to their own stated principles.
At least if a service gets blocked, people in the country gets aware of it and can complain.
In a country like Turkey where there are elections it may help to move the needle.
However when companies like Facebook cave in to the state censorship and control, they de-facto become accessory to the regime especially if they share logs with those government (allowing the government to tack dissidents).