Digital Rights

Free expression online: a blogger is silenced, a website is blocked, your privacy is compromised.

3725 articles
The band Songhoy Blues was forced to flee northeast Mali when Islamist militants took control and banned secular music, Songhoy Blues/Facebook

Why these censors can’t stop the music

How musicians in four different countries are finding surprising ways to defeat the censors and keep the beat going.

Brisbane, 19 April 2014, REUTERS/Phil Noble

Australian media advocate condemns powers to pursue journalists’ sources in Data Retention Bill

MEAA condemns an Australian parliamentary committee recommendation to support the passage of the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Amendment (Data Retention) Bill 2014 without any provision for the protection of journalists and their sources.

Bangladeshi students and social activists protest against the killing of Avijit Roy, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, 27 February 2015, AP Photo/ A.M. Ahad

Militant group claims responsibility for Bangladeshi blogger’s murder

Men with machetes killed writer and blogger Avijit Roy and seriously injured his wife; RSF urges the authorities to protect bloggers and combat impunity for those who attack them.

Members of the audience react after Federal Communications Commission (FCC) voting at Net Neutrality hearing in Washington, 26 February 2015, REUTERS/Yuri Gripas

Victory in the U.S. for net neutrality

A reclassification of broadband Internet gives the FCC the authority to enact (and enforce) narrow, clear rules which will help keep the Internet the open platform it is today.

An anti-government protester films with her iPad during a rally in Sanabis, west of Manama, Bahrain, 12 January 2012, REUTERS/Hamad I Mohammed

Sales of surveillance technology to Bahrain violated human rights guidelines, UK watchdog finds

British-German surveillance company Gamma has been condemned by a human rights watchdog for its failure to adhere to human rights and due diligence standards that would protect against the abusive use of its products in Bahrain.

U.S. President Barack Obama speaks during the White House Summit on Countering Violent Extremism, REUTERS/Joshua Roberts

In fight against extremism, press freedom must not be compromised

While there is little denying that extremists and militant groups must be tackled, an approach must be found that will not justify restricting the press.

Traffic passes Saint Andrew's Road in front of the old City Hall and Supreme Court Building at dusk in Singapore, 29 September 2007, REUTERS/Tim Chong

Singapore urged to eliminate archaic offense of “scandalizing the judiciary”

Prominent blogger Alex Au Wai Pang faces a fine and imprisonment when he is sentenced on 5 March.

Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook founder and CEO, at the Internet.org summit in New Delhi in October 2014, REUTERS/Adnan Abidi

Is a “free” Internet.org in Latin America really a win-win situation?

Promoting Internet access is laudable, but questions about the role of governments and users’ privacy have to be taken into account.

Link to: UN free expression rapporteur shares thoughts on Burma, upcoming challenges

UN free expression rapporteur shares thoughts on Burma, upcoming challenges

How can ongoing legal changes in Burma lead to an atmosphere that promotes press freedom, rather than limiting it? David Kaye, the U.N. special rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression, and others will answer that question at the IPI’s 2015 World Congress.

Link to: Three Vietnamese bloggers get jail terms for “abusing democratic freedoms”

Three Vietnamese bloggers get jail terms for “abusing democratic freedoms”

RWB condemns the sentences ranging from 12 to 18 months in prison that a people’s court imposed on three Vietnamese bloggers under criminal code article 258.

Link to: Unprecedented crackdown on freedom of expression in Malaysia

Unprecedented crackdown on freedom of expression in Malaysia

In less than 50 days since the start of 2015, Malaysian police have detained or investigated at least 23 individuals in relation to statements that they have made.

Privacy International

Did GCHQ spy on you? Demand government accountability for illegal spying

Privacy International’s campaign gives everyone a chance to remedy illegal government activity and hold intelligence agencies accountable.

Link to: Senior Muslim Brotherhood official sentenced to 18 months in jail in Jordan for criticizing UAE

Senior Muslim Brotherhood official sentenced to 18 months in jail in Jordan for criticizing UAE

Jordan’s State Security Court sentenced a senior opposition figure on February 15, 2015, to 18 months in prison for criticizing the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

A militant Islamist fighter uses a mobile to film his fellow fighters taking part in a military parade along the streets of Syria's northern Raqqa province June 30, 2014, REUTERS/Stringer

Fighting words: Taking on ISIS in the digital sphere

ISIS has been steadily strengthening its grip on social media and using the Internet for recruitment and to spread propaganda. These are strong weapons in any war. So who is fighting back?

With a budget allocation of $10.3 billion, the NRO is the third-largest U.S. intelligence agency. Its headquarters are in Chantilly, Virginia, By Trevor Paglen (Own work) [CC0], via Wikimedia Commons

Making the invisible visible: An artist brings the surveillance state out of the shadows

What does a surveillance state look like? That is the question photographer and “experimental geographer” Trevor Paglen tries to address in his recent projects.

Models pose for photographs next to Samsung Electronics' S'UHD smart television sets during its launch event in Seoul, 5 February 2015, REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji

Big Brother is listening: On smart TVs, users’ rights and security

As the devices in our homes get “smarter,” are they also going to spy on us? That question has led to one sentence in Samsung’s SmartTV privacy policy getting a lot of attention lately.