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Tell It! How to create a media strategy for your campaign

Read all our campaign tips on how to get media attention in the IFEX Campaign Toolkit!

Link to: Copyright law as a tool for State censorship of the Internet

Copyright law as a tool for State censorship of the Internet

If the Digital Millennium Copyright Act is U.S. law, how can governments around the world use it to censor speech?

An anti-government protester takes pictures as he stands behind burning barricades in Kiev's Independence Square, 19 February 2014, REUTERS/Yannis Behrakis

Freedom on the Net 2014: New controls, arrests drive Internet freedom decline

Global internet freedom declined for a fourth consecutive year, says Freedom House. New laws criminalised online dissent and legitimised overbroad surveillance and data collection, while more people were arrested for legitimate online activities than ever before.

Frank La Rue, former Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Expression, at a news conference in Tegucigalpa, 4 October 2011, REUTERS/Edgard Garrido

Over to you, David

In July 2014, Guatemalan human rights lawyer Frank La Rue’s mandate as UN Special Rapporteur for freedom of expression came to an end. Silvia Chocarro Marcesse interviewed La Rue and his successor, American law professor David Kaye, for IFEX.

Link to: End proliferation of surveillance technologies available to repressive countries

End proliferation of surveillance technologies available to repressive countries

The members of the Coalition Against Unlawful Surveillance Exports (CAUSE) have addressed an open letter to the Wassenaar Arrangement’s participating states ahead of their plenary meeting asking them to take heed of civil society views in their negotiations on dual-use goods and technologies.

Link to: Self-censorship: A how-to guide for dictators

Self-censorship: A how-to guide for dictators

ARTICLE 19 outlines the crucial elements of an effective regime of self-censorship, drawing on examples from Egypt.

Link to: IFJ marks on 25 November International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women

IFJ marks on 25 November International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women

On the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women, the IFJ and its different affiliates in Africa, Asia Pacific, Europe, Middle East and Latin America demand a real equality in working and salary conditions and rights between male and female media workers.

Link to: UN adopts resolution condemning unlawful government surveillance

UN adopts resolution condemning unlawful government surveillance

The UN adopted an important resolution reaffirming the right to privacy in the digital age, condemning unlawful government mass surveillance and calling on member States to review their legislation and policies to ensure that they are in line with human rights law.

Getachew Engida, UNESCO Deputy Director General, who presented the report at the Paris meeting on 21 November , ITU/R.Farrell

Violence against journalists on the rise, climate of impunity prevails, says UNESCO

2012 and 2013 have been the two most deadly years for the media since UNESCO began producing its Report on the Safety of Journalists and the Danger of Impunity in 2006.

People are silhouetted as they pose with laptops in front of a screen projected with binary code and a CIA emblem, in Zenica, Bosnia, 29 October 2014, REUTERS/Dado Ruvic

Detekt: New malware detection tool can expose illegitimate state surveillance

Detekt is an easy-to-use, open source tool that allows users to check their Windows PCs for signs of infection by surveillance malware that we know is being used by government to spy on activists and journalists.

Link to: U.S., Europe, others fall short in speaking out and supporting democracy

U.S., Europe, others fall short in speaking out and supporting democracy

The world’s leading democracies have a poor record of responding to the rise of authoritarianism in their own regions, according to a Freedom House report. The unwillingness to challenge violations of human rights, suppression of civil society, media restrictions etc. comes within the context of a mounting challenge to democratic institutions presented by authoritarian powers in Eurasia, the Middle East, China, and elsewhere.

https://govtrequests.facebook.com/

Complicity in censorship: Facebook reveals latest government requests

For years, pundits and scholars have warned of the implications of social media companies capitulating to foreign governments, handing over user data or censoring content. Facebook’s latest government requests report demonstrates why.

Link to: High stakes: UN enters late-stage negotiations for recognition of right to privacy in digital age

High stakes: UN enters late-stage negotiations for recognition of right to privacy in digital age

Given the challenging UN-level negotiations on the right to privacy, Privacy International and others have urged member states to adopt principles already spelled out in the High Commissioner’s report, as they are based on existing jurisprudence of human rights bodies.

PEN International

Day of the Imprisoned Writer: Governments urged to free unjustly imprisoned writers

15 November is the 33rd anniversary of the Day of the Imprisoned Writer. This year PEN is highlighting the cases of five writers from Cameroon, China, Iran, Kyrgyzstan, and Paraguay and calls for their immediate and unconditional release and for the charges against them to be dropped, along with all other writers similarly threatened.

A Catholic priest holds up an image of journalist Lasantha Wickrematunge during a protest in Colombo, 28 January 2014, REUTERS/Dinuka Liyanawatte

Courageous journalism should not come with a price

Journalism, the exercise of free expression, is a basic right both for practitioners and for the readers, viewers and listeners who benefit from it. They should be able to practice this right without fear of persecution. If they are to suffer, their oppressors must face justice.

Link to: The White House gets it right on net neutrality

The White House gets it right on net neutrality

President Barack Obama has called on the Federal Communications Commission to develop new “net neutrality” rules and establish the legal authority it needs to support those rules by reclassifying broadband service as a “telecommunications service.”