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4 votes
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The Australian prime minister has forgotten to renew his domain name
10 votes -
A genocide incited on Facebook, with posts from Myanmar’s military
8 votes -
Facebook to ban misinformation on voting in upcoming U.S. elections
10 votes -
Pinboard on Twitter: Palmer Luckey has made the maximum legal donation this year to Steve King, the nation's most openly white supremacist congressman.
@pinboard: Palmer Luckey has made the maximum legal donation this year to Steve King, the nation's most openly white supremacist congressman.
25 votes -
Why are African governments criminalising online speech? Because they fear it.
8 votes -
New technology favors tyranny. Yuval Noah Harrari on artificial intelligence, democracy, and the bigger picture
6 votes -
The future of war will be ‘liked’
6 votes -
How game design transformed Hillary for America's supporter engagement
2 votes -
'Rank socialism': Facebook removes senator's official page over hate speech
8 votes -
Text of u/DivestTrump's post about T_D and Russia propaganda that was deleted
51 votes -
The right to bear arms (and say shocking stuff on Facebook)
8 votes -
Today, Europe lost the internet. Now, we fight back
10 votes -
Facebook punishes liberal news site after fact check by right-wing site
10 votes -
California lawmakers pass nation’s toughest net neutrality law
14 votes -
Senator Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) asks FTC to investigate Google's market dominance
17 votes -
Trump accuses Google of rigging search results to show mostly negative stories about him
32 votes -
There should be ‘consequences’ for platforms that don’t remove people like Alex Jones, US Senator Ron Wyden says
12 votes -
This is what filter bubbles actually look like
13 votes -
The CIA’s secret public email address
7 votes -
An 11-year-old hacked into a US voting system replica in ten minutes this weekend
9 votes -
How three conspiracy theorists took 'Q' and sparked Qanon
20 votes -
Australia's crypto-busting bill still on the table
6 votes -
‘It’s our time to serve the Motherland’ How Russia’s war in Georgia sparked Moscow’s modern-day recruitment of criminal hackers
6 votes -
Experts criticize West Virginia’s plan for smartphone voting
13 votes -
Facebook deletes InfoWars pages
20 votes -
538 shares largest dataset of Russian troll tweets, compiled by two professors at Clemson University
17 votes -
11,000 Wikileaks Twitter DMs have just been published for anyone to read
10 votes -
Facebook has released information about accounts/pages they banned today due to involvement in a coordinated inauthentic political influence campaign
15 votes -
A withering verdict: MPs report on Zuckerberg, Russia and Cambridge Analytica
14 votes -
How Facebook is undermining democracy - Prof. Siva Vaidhyanathan
5 votes -
US Congress demands Jeff Bezos explain Amazon’s face recognition software
15 votes -
Looking inside a used voting machine from the 2016 election
12 votes -
Internal documents show Facebook's own marketing strategy was influenced by what it learned from its valued customer, the Trump campaign
8 votes -
The rise of digital dictatorships - Prof. Yuval Noah Harari
5 votes -
Elected officials, please stop drinking Silicon Valley's kool-aid
4 votes -
Wikipedia blacked out across Europe in protest against laws that could change the internet forever
18 votes -
Uganda just rolled out a five-cent daily tax to access social media
9 votes -
Facebook chats from planning session of Unite The Right 2 have been leaked
17 votes -
Chinese tech giant Huawei revealed as leading sponsor of travel for Australian MPs
3 votes -
Algeria shuts down the internet for two hours to prevent leaks and cheating on exams
9 votes -
California's Net Neutrality bill has been gutted
26 votes -
The EU's Copyright Directive, Article 13
Next week the EU parliament will vote for their new copyright directive. In general it contains some good ideas, but also some extremely bad ones, such as article 13. It will require all uploaded...
Next week the EU parliament will vote for their new copyright directive. In general it contains some good ideas, but also some extremely bad ones, such as article 13. It will require all uploaded content to be scanned, and deleted if it might contain references to other copyrighted material.
The issue here is the word might. Due to the possible fines for companies that accidentally leave up something that contains a copyrighted work, they are incentivized to act more harsh than often necessary. It's safer for them to delete everything that looks like it might infringe copyright than risk the fine.
This could be disastrous for the Internet as we know it. And this is why many movements are speaking out against it. One such example would be the open letter to EU parliament. More information is available on https://saveyourinternet.eu/resources/, and you can find much more about it all over the Internet if you search with your favourite search engine.
What's your opinion on article 13, and have you done anything to make your voice heard?
13 votes -
Inside Palmer Luckey's bid to build a US border wall
10 votes -
Digital IDs needed to end 'mob rule' online, says security minister Ben Wallace
6 votes -
The Honest Ads Act hits a brick wall ahead of the midterms. Bill would level playing field between online and TV political ads.
6 votes -
Mozilla to remove “meritocracy” from governance docs because it's “problematic”
12 votes -
California Senate defies AT&T, votes for strict net neutrality rules
19 votes -
President Trump violated the First Amendment by blocking users @realdonaldtrump
20 votes -
Want to quell hate speech on social media? Talk to right-wing politicians
7 votes