Calls For Social Media To Be Censored In Spain After Politician's Assassination Is Mocked On Twitter
from the beyond-libel dept
As Mike has noted, after starting out with some of the most reasonable copyright laws around, Spain came under some serious pressure from the US to replace them with ones that make the online environment there a far less innovative and pleasant place for users. Now it seems that recent unfortunate events could push the country even further in this direction. Global Voices explains the background:
Isabel Carrasco, a member of the People's Party, was shot near her home in León, allegedly by the mother of a fellow party member who blamed Carrasco for truncating the political career of her daughter. Carrasco became famous a few years ago for occupying 13 positions in the administration and private businesses. In 2011, it was revealed that she had increased her salary by 13 percent, but this did not prevent her from justifying budget cuts in 2012, saying that "Everything little thing can't be free".
Not surprisingly, perhaps, her assassination produced mixed reactions from people:
Shortly after learning about her death, many Internet users started to leave comments on social media, especially Twitter. Although the majority expressed their condolences to the family of the victim, there were some that took advantage of the moment to openly criticize the politician, including mocking her assassination
The Global Voices post has a selection of these, with translations, if you want the details. Suffice to say that they were enough to lead to a typical over-reaction by politicians. Here, for example, is the Spanish Minister of Interior, Jorge Fenández Díaz:
We have to combat cybercrime and promote cybersecurity, and to clean up undesirable social media.
Others added their support. The health spokesperson for the PSOE [Spanish Workers' Socialist Party], José Martínez Olmos, made the following comment:
It seems to me that the moment has come to regulate social media because not everything is suitable and less so when it incites violence or denigrates people or institutions.
The Federal Union of Politics went even further in its rhetoric:
It is necessary and urgent to regulate new criminal methods that go beyond libel and slander, and criminalize the violence executed en masse through the Internet.
Of course, Spain is not the only country where there's a public debate about the limits of free speech in the online world. But at a time when new laws are already restricting what can be done on the Internet in Spain, it's worrying to hear calls for even more clampdowns.
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Filed Under: assassination, censorship, free speech, mocking, politics, spain
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Politician to English translation:
'It is necessary and urgent to regulate new criminal methods that go beyond libel and slander, and criminalize the violence executed en masse through the Internet.'
Obviously someone was/is a big fan of Carreon, and shares the idea that people being 'mean' on the internet somehow qualifies as 'violence'.
It's almost understandable in a way I suppose, when you've got people, or a group of people, for whom image and reputation is everything, where having a huge ego is seen as not only not a flaw, but something to cultivate, people mocking and pointing out the flaws you try and hide would be seen as an attack against your very self.
Note the 'almost' in there however, because in the end that's all they are, 'mean words', and people who equate words with physical violence, and want them treated the same under the law, are doing little more than exposing just how fragile they are, funnily enough making them even more open to, and deserving of, mockery.
Also...
'We have to combat cybercrime and promote cybersecurity, and to clean up undesirable social media/speech.'
Added the word they would if they thought they could get away with it. 'Undesirable' is one of those words that should get everyone's attention any time a government official mentions it, as it generally means 'Although we probably wouldn't be able to defend or justify making X illegal, we'll be treating is as though it were regardless, using other tools at our disposal to deal with it.'
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Re: Politician to English translation:
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Re: Politician to English translation:
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But that doesn't mean that censorship is the correct answer; it may be the easiest, but it isn't the correct one.
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These whining, cowardly weaklings...
(Not that this would be an undesirable outcome...)
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Meanwhile in Thailand
No other USA site was affected, and Facebook worked via VPN. Looks like they were testing logging or per-site filtering and their computers got overloaded.
Facebook sites: THNewsWire , burntobeamillionaire2 , are our only uncensored source of news.
burntobeamillionaire has gone, but it use to be full of pro-democracy anti-coup stuff and pictures of the CROWN PRINCE, HEIR TO THE THROWN at home in his palace with his wife and kids. burntobeamillionaire2 is still around but barely updates.
We're in full lying propaganda mode now, posters are appearing thanking the junta for paying the farmers the money they were owed (which was being blocked by the coup Electoral Commission)... look at the 'farmers' putting up the posters:
https://scontent-a-fra.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xfp1/t1.0-9/s403x403/10322445_746756292012815_90 34477755260752624_n.jpg
(Not farmers, soldiers are putting up posters from 'farmers' thanking the junta for paying the government debts).
We also had a little mini-march in Phuket from Phuket rice farmers thanking the military for paying the rice debts. There are no rice farms in Phuket. None, zero. These are office workers in the army HQ.
Meanwhile a large protests sprung up near Democracy monument, the army has made open threats of violence if anti-coup protests continue.
The king has endorsed the coup leader, so any deaths are sovereign deaths.
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Re: Meanwhile in Thailand
No other USA site was affected, and Facebook worked via VPN. Looks like they were testing logging or per-site filtering and their computers got overloaded.
That's one possible explanation. Another is that it was done on Facebook's side. They have an already-long history of bowing down before repressive governments, assisting in propaganda, and handing over user information. As long as it's profitable for Facebook, they'll do it, no matter what it is.
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Re: Re: Meanwhile in Thailand
"Information and Communication Technology (ICT) permanent secretary Surachai Srisarakam said he had received an order from the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO) to temporarily deny access to Facebook,..."
They're asking Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Youtube, Line and others to come in and discuss future cooperation over illegal content and illegal discussions.
Google and Facebook both have offices and staff in Thailand, so they will hand over the data, or those staff will face arrest and detention. Civil law has been suspended here, nobody has any rights now. Your rights are whatever General Prayuth says they are.
The new government advisory panel is made up of the backers of the coup mob from the last 6 months, so its no surprise the mob that was trying to overthrow the government was really the army.
It's better to avoid Thailand for the next few years. I won't be stepping back on Thai soil ever.
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And yet these hypocrites lose no sleep when their own police are executing violence on their own people.
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The truth is people have always made fun of anything that exists. There just wasn't a way to know about it on a large scale. But if they want to censor people for expressing their own truthful opinions about something like this, then that makes me think that when we'll all be using devices that connect to our minds, they'll want to censor our minds, too, lest we think about something "nasty".
Hopefully by then we'll have reform most of the world's governments to be a lot more democratic and "P2P-like" so that doesn't happen.
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Just because they speak... that doesn't mean you have to listen...
Something politicians seem to have no understanding of.
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Re:
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Red flag word
When I see the word used, I'm pretty safe assuming that something nefarious is afoot until it is demonstrated otherwise.
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Re: Red flag word
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Like a kindergarten
Oh yeah and give him a timeout... (or throw him in prison).
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