Advertisement

HindustanTimes Thu,20 Jun 2013
RssFeed

Other Stories

Advertisement
Social networking sites more powerful than governments, say experts
ANI
September 17, 2012
First Published: 12:10 IST(17/9/2012)
Last Updated: 12:32 IST(17/9/2012)
Share more.
 comments   
Taking Social Media too seriously?
The controversy regarding a crude anti-Muslim movie, which sparked off lethal violence in the Middle East, has highlighted how internet companies, most of whom are based in the United States, have become global arbiters of free speech, weighing up on complex issues that are traditionally
performed by courts, judges and, occasionally through international treaties, experts have said.

"Notice that Google has more power over this than either the Egyptian or the US government," the Sydney Morning Herald quoted Tim Wu, a Columbia University law professor, as saying.

"Most free speech today has nothing to do with governments and everything to do with companies," he added.

After the anti-Muslim movie trailer spread like fire on the web and YouTube, breaking out protests in Egypt and Libya, Google was forced by White House officials to block access to the video in some of the Middle East countries.

However, days later, controversy over the 14-minute clip from The Innocence of Muslims was still roiling the Islamic world, with access blocked in Egypt, Libya, India, Indonesia and Afghanistan, the paper said.

In temporarily blocking the video in some countries, legal experts say, Google implicitly invoked the concept of "clear and present danger", which is a key exception to the broad first amendment protections in the US, where free speech is more jealously guarded than almost anywhere in the world.

The internet has been a boon to free speech, bringing access to information that governments have long tried to suppress. Google has positioned itself as an ally of such freedoms, as newspapers, book publishers and television stations long have, the paper said.

But because of the immediacy and global reach of internet companies, they face particular challenges in addressing a variety of legal restrictions, cultural sensitivities and, occasionally, national security concerns, it added.

"Google, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter now play this adjudicatory role on free speech," said Andrew McLaughlin, a former top policy official at Google who later worked for the Obama White House as deputy chief technology officer.


Share more.
 comments   

comment Note: By posting your comments here you agree to the terms and conditions of www.hindustantimes.com
blog comments powered by Disqus

Advertisement
Instagram coming to Windows phone: report

A rumor is circulating that the photo-editing and sharing application Instagram, which currently exists across Android and iOS, is coming to Windows mobile OS on June 26.

Now, an app that helps you confess your sins

A Roman Catholic prelate has developed a smart-phone application that will help let his parishioners know when and where he is available to listen to their sins.

more »
How Flipkart broke India's online shopping inertia
It was meant to be a portal that compared different e-commerce websites, only there weren't enough of them in the first place to be compared. Thus was born Flipkart, making sure that online shopping would never be the same again in India.
70 pc students use smartphones
About 70 per cent students today own smartphones with a larger user base in smaller cities than the metropolitan cities, according to a survey by software services firm TCS.
more »
Advertisement
Advertisement
Copyright © 2013 HT Media Limited. All Rights Reserved