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During an 8 June 2012 march in Istanbul, journalist Ahmet Sık and others call for their colleagues' freedom, DEMOTIX/Fulya Atalay

Turkish journalist laureate of UNESCO Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize 2014

Turkish journalist Ahmet Şik is an ardent defender of freedom of expression, and has devoted his career to denouncing corruption and human rights abuses.

Link to: Why the web needs perfect forward secrecy more than ever

Why the web needs perfect forward secrecy more than ever

EFF has long advocated for websites to support HTTPS instead of plain HTTP to encrypt and authenticate data transmitted on the Internet. However, a recently discovered catastrophic bug, nicknamed “Heartbleed,” has critically threatened the security of some HTTPS sites since 2011.

http://www.pen.org/pen/aiww

Stand up for Ai Weiwei and freedom of expression in China

PEN is spreading awareness of repression in China with its #WithFlowers campaign. Ai Weiwei posts daily photographs of fresh flowers outside of his apartment every day he cannot travel freely; now everyone can as well, on behalf of all Chinese writes and artists.

WAN-IFRA is posting daily profiles of imprisoned journalists and calling for action, http://www.wan-ifra.org/microsites/30-days-for-freedom

Campaign highlights plight of jailed journalists in lead up to World Press Freedom Day

The 30 Days for Freedom campaign highlights the plight of jailed journalists worldwide by focusing on 30 individuals currently imprisoned because of their work.

Link to: In welcome development, UN resolution recognises role of journalists covering protests

In welcome development, UN resolution recognises role of journalists covering protests

Reporters Without Borders hails the resolution on “the promotion and protection of human rights in the context of peaceful protests” that UN Human Rights Council adopted on 28 March 2014. It recognises and endorses the essential role journalists play in covering demonstrations and condemns the harassment and attacks they often suffer while so doing.

REUTERS/Kacper Pempel

New global coalition urges governments to keep surveillance technologies in check

World leaders must commit to keeping invasive surveillance systems and technologies out of the hands of dictators and oppressive regimes, said a new global coalition of human rights organizations as it launched in Brussels.

Photographs of people killed during the genocide on display at the Kigali Genocide Memorial Museum, 5 April 2014. , REUTERS/Noor Khamis

Reporting on the genocide in Rwanda: Too little, too late

How Western media coverage failed Rwanda and contributed to international indifference and inaction.

Link to: EFF welcomes Yahoo plan to protect users through new encryption measures

EFF welcomes Yahoo plan to protect users through new encryption measures

EFF welcomes the news that Yahoo is carrying through a concerted effort to protect users across its sites and services by rolling out routine encryption in several parts of its infrastructure.

REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay

UN must reject mass surveillance to protect global privacy rights

In response to a consultation being undertaken by the UN on the right to privacy in the digital age, Privacy International in conjunction with six other groups called on the UN to recognise that mass surveillance is incompatible with human rights.

Cairo, 10 March 2014, REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh

Following the money: How States are funding surveillance technologies

Surveillance companies selling mass and intrusive spy technologies to human rights-abusing governments often are benefitting from the financial and institutional support from their home government, revealing a more closely-linked relationship between the sector and the State than previously believed.

Link to: A response to UK rules restricting prisoners’ access to books

A response to UK rules restricting prisoners’ access to books

Anything that stands in the way of a prisoner reading anything is a lunatic act. It costs them more and it costs us more, says Index on Censorship in response to UK Justice Secretary Chris Grayling’s Incentives and Earned Privileges scheme.

After Barack Obama urged NATO allies to up their defense budgets, demonstrators protest near the U.S. Embassy in Rome, 27 March 2014, REUTERS/Yara Nard

UN Rights Council members urged to reject proposed amendments to resolution on peaceful protest

ARTICLE 19 together with 15 other leading international human rights organisations has called on Member States of the UN Human Rights Council to reject amendments, proposed by South Africa and a group of “like minded States”, to weaken a resolution on promoting and protecting human rights in the context of peaceful protest.

Link to: New website to expose how UN Rights Council members respond to violations

New website to expose how UN Rights Council members respond to violations

A new website, “Votes Count,” will shed much needed light on how member countries at the United Nations Human Rights Council respond to serious violations of human rights across the globe.

Visitors are seen on an infra-red camera screen of the surveillance system MEOS II at the defence exhibition in New Delhi, 6 February 2014, REUTERS/Anindito Mukherjee

Stemming the harm caused by the surveillance trade: A way forward

According to a new study, international efforts to oversee the trade in surveillance technologies urgently need to be updated in order to keep up in the digital age.

Link to: Surveillance companies react to heightened scrutiny in Switzerland, withdraw export applications

Surveillance companies react to heightened scrutiny in Switzerland, withdraw export applications

Facing intense scrutiny from a Swiss government inquiry into the human rights impact of the commercial surveillance trade, companies have packed up and are no longer attempting to export their spying technology from Switzerland.

A boy collects drinking water for his family in a slum on the outskirts of Lahore, 21 March 2014. World Water Day will be marked on 22 March, REUTERS/Mohsin Raza

Principles on free expression and rights to water and sanitation launched on eve of World Water Day

On the eve of World Water Day, ARTICLE 19 launches “The Free Flow Principles: Freedom of Expression and Rights to Water and Sanitation”. The Principles, developed in cooperation with experts and activists from around the world, provide guidance to policy makers and activists on how freedom of expression and information can help secure the rights to water and sanitation.