Twitter has embraced censorship, many fear -- and the world’s most repressive regimes are applauding the move.
The short-messaging service announced on Thursday what it called a commitment to free speech,
a technology update that allows it to censor messages on a
country-by-country basis. The move had Internet users up in arms over
the weekend, with many joining in a Twitter “blackout.”
But it’s earning applause in countries that endorse censorship.
“It is impossible to have boundless freedom, even on the Internet,” read an editorial published Monday
on the website of state-run Chinese newspaper Global Times. “Twitter
might have … already realized the fact and made a choice between being
an idealistic political tool as many hope and following pragmatic
commercial rules as a company.”
The so-called “Great Firewall of China” is widely described as a black eye on Internet freedom. And China was not alone.
Technology minister Anudith Nakornthap said
Monday in an article in the Thai newspaper Bangkok Post that the new
policy was a "constructive" development. The Southeast Asian country
routinely blocks websites with content deemed offensive to the Thai
monarchy.
Anudith said it was good that Twitter "felt
responsible to cooperate with governments to make sure basic rights are
not violated through the use of social media."
Thailand's task force that monitors anti-monarchy content has blocked 1,156 websites since December.
Twitter has been a tool of free speech and
dissent around the world and its policy change last week ignited global
outrage. The U.S. State Department credited Twitter with being upfront
about the policy but reserved comment otherwise.
Twitter sees the censorship tool as a way to
ensure that individual messages, or tweets, remain available to as many
people as possible while it navigates a gauntlet of different laws
around the world.
Before, when Twitter erased a tweet it
disappeared throughout the world. Now, a tweet containing content
breaking a law in one country can be taken down there and still be seen
elsewhere.
Twitter will post a censorship notice
whenever a tweet is removed. That's similar to what Internet search
leader Google Inc. has been doing for years when a law in a country
where its service operates requires a search result to be removed.
Meanwhile, foreign dissidents and activists
fear the new policy will stifle free speech and are threatening an
ongoing boycott of Twitter, reported the Los Angeles Times.
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