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Twitter Censorship

Court Orders Turkish Twitter Ban Temporarily Lifted, Twitter Prepares Challenge 29

redletterdave (2493036) writes "Less than a week after the Turkish government banned Twitter over failing to remove allegations of government corruption from the social network, a Turkish court on Wednesday suspended the ban, calling it 'illegal.'" Unfortunately, according to the BBC Twitter may remain blocked until after the elections: "The administrative court in Ankara issued a temporary injunction on Wednesday ordering the TIB to restore access to Twitter until it could deliver its full verdict on the ban. Turkish media reports suggested the ban would be suspended soon afterwards but a source in Mr Erdogan's office told Reuters news agency the TIB had 30 days to implement or appeal against the court ruling." In the meantime, Twitter is attempting to fight the ban directly.
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Court Orders Turkish Twitter Ban Temporarily Lifted, Twitter Prepares Challenge

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  • by fustakrakich ( 1673220 ) on Wednesday March 26, 2014 @02:52PM (#46586545) Journal

    They should help provide information and methods of circumvention to help ensure that no state can block them. Going through the courts is just workfare for the lawyers.

    • by rvw ( 755107 ) on Wednesday March 26, 2014 @03:13PM (#46586785)

      They should help provide information and methods of circumvention to help ensure that no state can block them. Going through the courts is just workfare for the lawyers.

      Twitter feeds can be viewed via other websites. Take Wordpress (the software, not the site), which has numerous twitter plugins. You cannot block all individual sites that have these feeds. Turkey cannot prevent those sites from using twitter as long as those sites are hosted outside Turkey. I thought this was common practise in Iran and Libya and other countries that tried to block twitter since the revolutions in the islamic world.

  • islamists (Score:1, Troll)

    by schlachter ( 862210 )

    the reason for the ban is islamists. the run the country.
    legality has nothing to do with fairness. look at sharia law.

    • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

      Funny how you're modded troll for pointing out the truth. I guess someone on /. doesn't like having their sensibilities hurt.

      • didn't know there were so many muslims on slashdot...maybe it's read in London or Sweden more than I realized?
        in any case, everyone knows this is the truth, it's not racist or bigoted to speak the truth.

  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Wednesday March 26, 2014 @03:07PM (#46586715)

    In other words, the old fart wants to silence the "rumors" about his embezzlement and money laundering, hoping that he finds enough idiots to be reelected.

    • As I understand it, he's moved towards the Islamic fundamentalists over the years. So I don't think it's a matter of finding them, I think he already has them and realizes they won't care about the censorship. If anything, they'll like it.
      • by Znork ( 31774 )

        And that's pretty much why Turkey should be kept outside the EU. Europe does not need an influx of 50 million voters of whom a significant portion can even consider voting for someone like Erdogan.

        The accession talks should end. Turkey can fall into the dark ages on its own.

        • The EU has nothing to do with Europe or whether it would be politically interesting to do something. It's a purely economic special interest group that was sadly given political power.

          • Yeah, but tearing down the borders within Europe is definitely a good thing. If only NAFTA was that straightforward, but it's even more oriented for the benefit of big business only, with no benefit to the citizens of that continent at all.

            • Tearing down the borders hardly benefits the average citizen. How much would change for you (assuming you're from the US) if you'd have to take a passport with you if you traveled across state borders? How often do you?

              You'd have to take into account that it is FAR less common in Europe to move away from your home country than it is for someone in the US to move away from his home state (e.g. for a new job), so it's very likely that all your relatives are also living in the same state you're in. How often w

  • by schneidafunk ( 795759 ) on Wednesday March 26, 2014 @03:07PM (#46586729)

    "The last order instructed us to take down an account accusing a former minister of corruption. This order causes us concern. Political speech is among the most important speech, especially when it concerns possible government corruption. That’s why today we have also petitioned the Turkish court on behalf of our users to reverse this order.

    While we contest the order, we are using our Country Withheld Content tool on the account in question, the first time we’ve used it in Turkey, as well as on several Tweets based on the public prosecutor’s request regarding the safety of an individual. The tool allows content to be withheld in a specific jurisdiction while remaining visible to the rest of the world."

    Although I did not find the specific tweet on http://chillingeffects.org/int... [chillingeffects.org]

  • by RandomUsername99 ( 574692 ) on Wednesday March 26, 2014 @03:12PM (#46586777)

    The Turkish Twist ban, however, remains firmly in effect as Erdogan's shuddering remembrance of the projectile vomit he was forced to clean up at the fair, during his summer job in high school, brushes aside the media's criticism of his hard-lined approach.

  • by RavenManiac ( 220921 ) on Wednesday March 26, 2014 @03:38PM (#46586975)

    Tayyip Erdoan isn't stupid. In fact he's one of the better recent Turkish leaders, but he's a conservative [not crazy] Muslim.

    He's not following events in Egypt. When Hosni Mubarak saw all the excitement about Twitter messaging, he banned Twitter to stop the tweets. So the tweeters did the best thing to get the word out. They left their homes and businesses to rally in the streets--real, not virtual interaction--since virtual contact was shut down.

    That was the beginning of the "Arab Spring" and the downfall of Mubarak. Erdoan needs to be more confident about the future and stop listening to the religious conservative extremists, so he won't make all the same mistakes as Mubareak. Turkey is more forward-thinking than that, or at least it was, until Erdoan got spooked [stupid]. http://www.todayszaman.com/new... [todayszaman.com]

    • by stdarg ( 456557 )

      Hmm the big difference is that Mubarak suppressed Islamist groups and Erdogan works with them. Who do you think was the muscle behind the protests in Egypt? Who is going to topple Erdogan? How are they going to do against the hardcore Muslims who support Turkey's fall into Islamism? I'm reminded of the hilarious naivete of Iranian intellectuals and communists who thought that allying with radical Muslims was a great idea to get rid of the shah. "Hey we'll let the Muslims do the fighting, and then they'll le

  • by Andrio ( 2580551 ) on Wednesday March 26, 2014 @06:49PM (#46588591)

    But if an election were coming up, I would vote for the guy that _didn't_ block Twitter.

    • by stdarg ( 456557 )

      What if you're a devout Muslim who believes Twitter should be blocked since it's a tool of Western agents to defame and slander your leader, a true lion of Islam, who wants to restore the caliphate?

      Yeah, there are more people like that in Turkey than people like you...

  • Plug-in for facebook? Lets see those "devout Muslims" with a revolution at hands because people are not stupidified with twitter and facebook and go to the streets...

One man's constant is another man's variable. -- A.J. Perlis

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