International

International
At a glance At a glance
International

2615 articles
Books are displayed on the pavement during an event marking the World Book and Copyright Day in downtown Bucharest, 23 April 2013, REUTERS/Bogdan Cristel

Copyright week: Six principles that should guide policy

In the week leading up the two-year anniversary of the SOPA blackout protests, EFF and others are talking about key principles that should guide copyright policy.

EFF

Transparency is fundamental to good copyright policy, EFF and partners say

In the week leading up the two-year anniversary of the SOPA [Stop Online Piracy Act] blackout protests, EFF and others are talking about key principles that should guide copyright policy.

Link to: Microsoft, Google, and Yahoo! pass free expression “stress test”, with room for improvement

Microsoft, Google, and Yahoo! pass free expression “stress test”, with room for improvement

The Global Network Initiative has released its first assessment report of Microsoft, Google, and Yahoo, and found all three firms to be “in compliance.” The assessment process determines how member tech companies implement principles for protecting free expression and privacy in the digital age.

Link to: Is Reddit censoring climate change deniers?

Is Reddit censoring climate change deniers?

It is Reddit.com’s famed lack of censorship that has led opinion writers on both sides of the Atlantic to comment on the site’s new policy on climate change denial.

Link to: Five artists attacked for their work in 2013

Five artists attacked for their work in 2013

It is not uncommon across the world for performers to be attacked as a form of censorship, ultimately silencing what they are trying to say. Index on Censorship highlights five cases of artists who were persecuted for their work in 2013.

Graphical interpretation of the words most frequently used on EFF's Deeplinks blog in 2013, EFF

2013 in review: Fight for free expression and privacy in technology

In 2013, we received confirmation and disturbing details about the NSA programs that are sweeping up information on hundreds of millions of people in the United States and around the world. This set off a cascade of events, from EFF’s newest lawsuit against the NSA to protests in the streets to a United Nations resolution to Congressional bills both promising and terrifying. In December, a federal judge even found the surveillance likely unconstitutional, calling it “almost-Orwellian.”

An Iraqi journalist stands near the archive newspapers burned when an armed group attacked "Addustour" newspaper in Baghdad, 2 April 2013; Iraq has an appalling record of not prosecuting attacks on journalists, REUTERS/Thaier al-Sudani

Syria, Iraq, Egypt most deadly nations for journalists in 2013

The conflict in Syria, a spike in Iraqi bloodshed, and political violence in Egypt accounted for the high number of journalists killed on the job in 2013, says a CPJ special report.

Journalists hold a banner while taking part in a demonstration in front of the Parliament building in Islamabad, on 28 January 2013, REUTERS/Faisal Mahmood

2013 second deadliest year for journalists

With at least 117 journalists killed, 2013 was the second deadliest year on the IPI’s Death Watch.The list of the most dangerous countries for the media remains virtually unchanged.

In this December 2012 photo, journalists Bryn Karcha (C) of Canada and Toshifumi Fujimoto (R) of Japan run for cover next to an unidentified fixer in a street in Syria, REUTERS/Muzaffar Salman

108 journalists killed in 2013 to test UN Day to End Impunity

The IFJ has issued a desperate appeal for governments across the world to end impunity for violence against journalists and media staff after documenting 108 killings in 2013.

Link to: German OECD National Contact Point unwilling to investigate role of German company in human rights violations in Bahrain

German OECD National Contact Point unwilling to investigate role of German company in human rights violations in Bahrain

By failing to investigate the extent of the Trovicor company’s wrongdoing, the OECD is turning a blind eye to how German made surveillance technology is being used by the Bahraini government to target and suppress pro-democracy voices.

Link to: UN General Assembly approves resolution on “The right to privacy in the digital age”

UN General Assembly approves resolution on “The right to privacy in the digital age”

A UN approved privacy resolution is aimed at upholding the right to privacy for everyone at a time when the United States and the United Kingdom have been conducting sweeping mass surveillance on billions of innocent individuals around the world from domestic soil.

The global reach of IFEX’s 2013 campaign to end impunity

View and share this infographic from the International Day to End Impunity campaign. What was the campaign all about? What actions did people take? Were our voices heard?

Photographer Denis Sinyakov of Russia stands in a defendants' cage during a court session in St. Petersburg on 18 November 2013. Sinyakov is among 30 people arrested for a Greenpeace protest against offshore Arctic drilling, REUTERS/Maxim Zmeyev

Second worst year on record for jailed journalists

For the second consecutive year, Turkey was the world’s leading jailer of journalists, followed closely by Iran and China. The number of journalists in prison globally decreased from a year earlier but remains close to historical highs.

Muslims pray for the slain body of Somali journalist Mohamed Ibrahim Rageh in southern Mogadishu on 22 April 2013, REUTERS/Feisal Omar

RSF: 71 journalists killed and dramatic increase in abductions in 2013

According to the Reporters Without Borders tally, the regions with the largest numbers of journalists killed in connection with their work were Asia (with 24) and the Middle East and North Africa (with 23).

Link to: Why access to information must be a central pillar in the future of development

Why access to information must be a central pillar in the future of development

On 9 December 2013, a joint statement was launched with the intention of starting a discussion on including access to information as a central pillar in the post-2015 development framework.

A closeup of pages of the Qur'an, REUTERS/Ina Fassbender

Censorship and repression in the name of religion

Reporters Without Borders released a report entitled “Information sacrificed on altar of religion” which tackles a special and formidable form of censorship exercised in the name of religion and even God.