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Freedom of speech

Some European ISPs ordered by courts to block access to gambling

25 August, 2010
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This article is also available in:
Deutsch: Europäische ISPs sollen Zugang zu Glücksspiel-Seiten sperren


As a result of a case introduced by Arjel (the new French online gambling regulating authority) against Gibraltar-based site stanjames.com which had not responded to the authority's formal request to stop its services to French users, on 6 August 2010, the Paris High Court ordered ISPs to block access to the gambling site, which had no licence from the French authorities.

The court also ordered the ISPs to screen certain messages to prevent users from circumventing the blocking measures which ISPs consider as a wrong measure.

Italy: New draft law endangers bloggers' freedom of expression

28 July, 2010
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This article is also available in:
Deutsch: Italien: Neuer Gesetzesentwurf gefährdet Meinungsfreiheit von Blogger...


A group of Italian bloggers and journalists have made an appeal "No Legge Bavaglio alla rete" (No Gag Law to the Net) to support the campaign against a draft law that will add new barriers to freedom of expression on the Internet. The draft law, called Wiretapping Bill which is going to be discussed by the Italian Parliament on 29 July 2010, has raised many concerns from magistrates and journalists as well.

The present appeal refers to Article 1, paragraph 29 of the bill which extends the rectification obligation of the written press to all online publishers, including bloggers.

Increased Internet censorship in Belarus

14 July, 2010
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This article is also available in:
Deutsch: Zunehmende Internetzensur in Weißrussland


The Belarus government has adopted new measures increasing the control of the Internet and restrictions on online freedom of expression.

Following Decree no.60 (On measures for improving use of the national Internet network) issued on 1 February 2010 by President Alyaksandr Lukashenka, Belarus Council of Ministers adopted five resolutions with new Internet regulations introducing the compulsory registration of all web sites and the collection of personal data of Internet cafe users.

The decree will enter fully into force on 1 September but the police has already started interrogations and equipment seizures in a campaign mea

European Parliament invents Google Nanny

14 July, 2010
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This article is also available in:
Deutsch: Europäisches Parlament macht Google zum Kindermädchen


The Environment, Public Health and Consumer Protection of the European Parliament has found another use for Google. From now on, Google should read what we are searching for and, if the search implies any risky behaviour, Google should tell us to be careful. Of course, it would not be just Google but any "search engine" and nobody felt to that it was necessary define what exactly a "search engine" would be in this context.

The first such "risky" behaviour would be looking for information about medication.

Iceland - first steps for a new media haven

30 June, 2010
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This article is also available in:
Deutsch: Island: Erste Schritte zu einem neuen Medienhafen


Iceland's Parliament has recently accepted a proposal by Icelandic Modern Media Initiative (IMMI) asking the Icelandic Government to find "ways to strengthen freedoms of expression and information freedom in Iceland, (and provide) strong protections for sources and whistleblowers."

The proposal from IMMI came after secret dealings by a few banks in Iceland in 2009 leading to enormous debts and the lack of regulation and control, almost bankrupted the entire country.

Increased pressure on Turkey to stop Internet blocking

30 June, 2010
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This article is also available in:
Deutsch: Netzsperren: Zunehmender Druck auf die Türkei


As Turkey continues its ban on Google's YouTube and other services, it attracts more and more criticism. After Turkey's President Abdullah Gul himself has taken position against its own government in this matter, it is now OSCE turn to react.

On 22 June 2010, Dunja Mijatovic, the OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media, asked the Turkish authorities to restore access to Google's YouTube and other services and change the much-criticized Law No. 5651 (so-called Internet Law) in order to be in line with international standards on free expression.

MEPs debating Human Rights for Internet users

16 June, 2010
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This article is also available in:
Deutsch: Abgeordnete diskutieren Menschenrechte für Internetuser


On 2 June 2010, the Subcommittee on Human Rights of the European Parliament (DROI) hosted a parliamentary hearing on the human rights implications of new information technologies and communications networks.

Finnish Green MEP Heidi Hautala, the Chair of the Human Rights sub-committee, said that European companies should be encouraged to join the "Global network initiative" and promised to identify possible problems.

Andrew Puddephatt from Global Partners and Associates who presented a study on human rights and the new technologies at the request of the MEPs, said the Internet was an "evolving transnational ecos

Turkey extends the censorship of YouTube

16 June, 2010
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This article is also available in:
Deutsch: Türkei weitet Zensur von YouTube aus

Macedonian: Турција ја проширува цензурата на YouTube


So far, Turkey does not seem to be impressed by the criticism against its censorship policy regarding Internet content and blocking of websites.

On 4 June 2010, the High Council for Telecommunications reported having asked ISPs to block additional YouTube-linked IP addresses and since then, Turkish Internet users have had problems accessing Google services such as Google Analytics, Google Translate, Google AdWords or Google Docs.

The Turkish authorities hav

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