Singapore Seeks Even More Control Over Online Media 78
An anonymous reader writes "Currently ranked 149th globally in terms of press freedom, alongside Iraq and Myanmar, the Singapore government has chosen to further tighten its grip on the media instead of letting up. The Media Development Authority (MDA) announced yesterday that 'online news sites' reporting regularly on issues relating to Singapore and have significant reach among readers here will require an individual license from the MDA. Under the regime, website operators have to comply within 24 hours with any directives from the MDA to take down content that breaches standards. These sites also have to put up a 'performance bond' of S$50,000. The Government also plans to amend the Broadcasting Act next year, to ensure that websites which are hosted overseas but report on Singapore news are brought under the licensing framework as well."
Overseas laws (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Overseas laws (Score:5, Insightful)
Extraterritorial laws can sometimes be enforced, but I'm not sure Singapore is really in a position to do so. The U.S. is probably the most effective at enforcing its laws extraterritorially (much to the dismay of many non-Americans), and the UK does so somewhat with its notorious libel laws, but Singapore ain't no US or UK.
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It's simple really. If a website gets sufficient traction in Singapore to appear on government radar, they are probably in a position where they will want to incorporate in Singapore in order to more efficiently monetize their users there. I think it's pretty clear what most companies will choose to do.
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Why would they want to base their operations where their users are? That means they'll need to pay local taxes.
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It doesn't matter where they are, many survive on advertising. Upset the government and it either grabs your advertising income directly or tells your advertisers that if they continue to advertise with you that they will be ''leant on''; either way: kills your advertising income.
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Re:Overseas laws (Score:5, Interesting)
Except well, Singapore has a great firewall as well, and all media is censored prior to sale. If you note, it's any site with a large number of Singaporean readers. Which means if you don't comply, they will simply cut you off at the gateway. If you have any media assets locally, they can be seized. Or if you publish anything, expect Customs ot sieze them as well.
If you're a big publisher, this is quite problematic, especially if you have related media assets like DVDs and such.
And nevermind that Singapore is a huge port into Asia and often a stopover or destination.
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Singapore has a great firewall as well, and all media is censored prior to sale.
Perhaps, then, they should consider renaming their country the Nation of Wal-Mart?
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Perhaps, then, they should consider renaming their country the Nation of Wal-Mart?
They'll have to get in line behind the U.S. And China.
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Re:Overseas laws (Score:5, Insightful)
And nevermind that Singapore is a huge port into Asia and often a stopover or destination.
Surely you mean Hong Kong? Or Manila? The Lion City treads a very fine line at the best of times lah, if they insist on acting like a tinpot dictatorship they will most assuredly be treated as such.
The world needs Singapore a lot less than Singapore needs the world.
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Singapore post delivers a lot of stuff from Hong Kong to the rest of the world.
Re:Overseas laws (Score:5, Interesting)
In terms of political-economic power, Singapore absolutely controls the major trading route from the Indian Ocean to the Asian-Pacific rim. Yes, you can go around it but you'll be in even more pirate infested waters, dealing with the odd reef and oceanic sandbars, etc. You'll also forgo refueling in Singapore if needed. And protection. We don't break out the
So, what are you going to do to Singapore? Squawk, that's about your only option. And I don't think you get much support (actually lot's of opposition) from the major trading partners dependent (Japan, China) on the flow of trade there. Historically, the US likes freedom of the seas (Mission #1 of the US Navy) far more than other nice-to-haves. I can't see that changing. Sorry.
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Polite is not a word I would associate with Singaporeans. Politeness in Asia is really confined to Japan, Korea and Thailand.
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I was in Singapore a few months ago and I found everyone I spoke with to be extremely helpful, friendly, and polite.
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I hope his time in federal prison was far more enjoyable that a bullet to the head.
I hope it was more enjoyable than the hanging he would have received in Singapore, since that's the sole method of execution there.
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damn. watch where you pointing that flashlight of TRUTH.
we all gonna go blind.
Re:Overseas laws (Score:4, Insightful)
"I've been there a half-dozen times so far and it is a bit oppressive if misbehaving is part of your makeup."
Because watching poor, demanding greater freedoms from your government and chewing gum are of course part of the makeup of a misbehavour. This is the no true Scotsman fallacy, you're saying that if someone falls foul of Singapore's laws then it's obviously because they were misbehaving because no true nice person could ever fall foul of the law!
"I'm a libertarian and opposed by principle to such laws but" ...but you're actually not because you like the effects of a police state where everyone is too scared to dare speak out against the government, where numerous abuses occur and where such simple things as a porn DVD or chewing gum in your backpack can be grounds for you to be beaten, tortured, and jailed for a year?
Other than that what you say about Singapore offering safe passage is nonsense, it offers safe passage relatively free from piracy precisely because it is the route used right now for shipping through that region. You're assuming it's Singapore that makes it a good shipping route when in reality it's the chosen shipping route that makes Singapore - if it were to move Singapore would become irrelevant. As for refuelling I have to wonder if you've ever actually looked at a map, you do realise how small Singapore is right? refuelling before or after passing Singapore is a rather trivial exercise, again, the only reason it's chosen as a refuelling stop right now is because the world uses that shipping route.
The fact is that Singapore is entirely dependent on the world continuing to pass it's shores and pass through it's airport, it's the only reason it has some degree of wealth.
Right now Singapore is fine because it doesn't actually cause much trouble for the rest of the world, and because it's a Western ally but the reality is if any of that were to change it's simply way too small a nation to have a real impact. Closure of the Suez Canal or the Panama Canal would have a vastly larger impact due to the size of detour this would require but previous studies have shown it wouldn't be an insurmountable problem, it would be a pain but not the end of the world. Compare the size of Singapore's ocean territory, the locality of alternative paths, the locality of alternative ports, but perhaps most importantly, the number of close proximity nations that would gladly take Singapore's stopover trade for themselves.
It's not as if countries like China can't ramp up production to replace Singapore's historically significant manufacturing base overnight nowadays either. If anything Singapore needs the world to keep supporting it more than ever, because the things it used to do well are more and more trivially replaceable by other nations.
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works great when you can use the two magic words: nuclear fucking weapons
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works great when you can use the two magic words: nuclear fucking weapons
I thought the two magic words were precious bodily fluids.
Re:Overseas laws (Score:4, Interesting)
The Wall Street Journal had a run-in with Singapore which was very amusing to those who think that the WSJ editorial page was written by pompous right-wing assholes.
The WSJ editorial page had long praised Singapore as a model free-market state, which showed that you didn't need socialism to get a developed economy.
Then they printed an op-ed essay in one of their editions by an opposition politician. Lee's government used to deal with its legislative opponents by suing them for libel. The Singapore courts always ruled that they had committed libel, and awarded Lee huge damages which drove the opposition politician into bankruptcy. Under Singapore law, you can't serve in the legislature if you're bankrupt. So they had to leave the legislature. Cute, huh?
So Lee sued the WSJ, which had an Asian edition with a large circulation in Singapore, for libel. Lee won. The WSJ had to pay damages, and even worse, they weren't allowed to sell their newspaper in Singapore until they published a groveling apology.
What a dilemma! Stick to your principles of free speech, and lose millions of dollars of sales in one of the fastest-growing asian markets? Or cave in, abandon your principles, and throw the political dissidents to the wolves?
The WSJ printed an editorial trying to educate Lee and the Singaporian people (and businessmen) of the virtues of American-style free speech. The Singaporian people didn't pay much attention. After all, this was a matter of money (and power).
So finally the WSJ caved in, paid up, and printed a groveling, Soviet-style recantation.
I was in Singapore about a year later. You can find the New York Times everywhere. I asked for a copy of the WSJ. Everybody was "sold out". I finally found a copy in a bookstore on the fifth floor of a monster shopping mall at the end of an out-of-the way corner.
The Singaporean people were very nice. All the teenagers walk around with science textbooks. The restaurants have signs that say, "No studying." They're neat and well-dressed like Moonies, only smarter.
Lee was interviewed on Terry Gross and he defended his human rights violations. He said when he came in, they were living in poverty. They didn't have toilets. Now it's a modern developed state with an economy like Western Europe. I guess people are entitled to choose a dictator. I guess the Cuban people are entitled to say the same thing about Fidel Castro.
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Agree the Lee's are a bunch of assholes.
Here in America, we have 100% freedom to say whatever we want. But just don't say anything bad about the government [slashdot.org].
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Lee was interviewed on Terry Gross and he defended his human rights violations
I am not here to defend Lee, nor Singapore
All I want to point up is, when you are looking at the map of Singapore, try look at which country is at the North of the island of Singapore
There, you will find a place where Apartheid is still officially sanctioned
If you ever thought that Apartheid is dead when South Africa's racist government collapsed and when Mandela was released from jail, all you need to remember is to point your finger at the map of Singapore, and then, move your finger a bit, to the North
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Yes, it's fun and easy to slap one-word push-peoples-buttons labels on things that are actually quite complicated.
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Lee was interviewed on Terry Gross and he defended his human rights violations
I am not here to defend Lee, nor Singapore
All I want to point up is, when you are looking at the map of Singapore, try look at which country is at the North of the island of Singapore
There, you will find a place where Apartheid is still officially sanctioned
If you ever thought that Apartheid is dead when South Africa's racist government collapsed and when Mandela was released from jail, all you need to remember is to point your finger at the map of Singapore, and then, move your finger a bit, to the North
Israel is far west of Singapore, not north
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Singapore is still a very important trade area even though it seems to suffer from the curse of ridiculous laws that seem to be prevalent in Asia (seriously, why can't there be a country with the freedom of business of Singapore/Hong Kong but with unrestricted personal freedoms?).
If Singapore doesn't like your site, they will either try to extort money from you (like what they did to the Wall Street Journal) or simp
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to ensure that websites which are hosted overseas but report on Singapore news are brought under the licensing framework as well
So politicians in Singapore are just as fucktardedly stupid when it comes to technology as politicians anywhere else in the world? Good luck making that work, Singapore.
Good luck, Singapore (Score:1)
I think you'll find other countries are disinclined to care about/enforce/assist in enforcing/acknowledge/pretend they're not laughing at/etc. this kind of law.
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From the Abstract... (Score:2)
Heh. Good luck with that.
Even if the Singaporean pipeline to the rest of the Internet were filtered like China's, there's no practical way to censor every possible news outlet that might choose to report on Singapore unless they take a whitelist approach and censor everything but the bit they're willing to l
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I'd be interested to see how far their interpretation goes as well. Can you imagine the Singapore government trying to prevent the Seattle Times or a newspaper in Tolouse reporting that Singapore Airlines ordered more planes? Or trying to punish the BBC, Pravda, CNN, Fox, MSNBC, Al Jazeera, and every other news source if one of their planes went down?
I'd use a non-aviation example, but I can't rightly think of anything else in Singapore which would be reported on internationally. Except a stupid American
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Defamation is whole different ballgame than simply reporting on news about the country itself.
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I don't think they're under any illusion that they can cut off the news flow. I think they just want to tame the biggest outlets to their will, and they figure the 95% control of the masses that this gives them is enough. Not being too familiar with Singapore politics, I'm not sure exactly what they are aiming at.
Overseas? (Score:2)
And exactly how do they intend to enforce this against sites hosted overseas, provided the owner of the site doesn't live in Singapore either? Do they plan to build really, really long canes?
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Simple. There is already a filter in place. Play by the rules, or get filtered out.
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Probably they will use their guns. In the battle of Singapore (February 1942) they had all their guns pointed towards the sea. Hours long they sat there with binoculars waiting for the Japanese Imperial Navy to arrive. The Japanese soldiers did... Over land... From the back... Completely circumventing the whole defe
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newsflash! (Score:3)
News Update: this story may be attempted to be controlled by Singapore but the Internetlandians do not recognize their authority over Internetland, seeing as how they only own and rule Singapore.
What an asshole country (Score:2)
I once met a Singapore woman ins hostel in Stockholm/Sweden. By chance we had a conversation about freedom. I asked her, the insensitive clod I am, about freedom of speech in Singapore and, confirmed by her remarks stated that Singapore has NO freedom (media, speech, etc). Even 10000 km away from her home it was as if a minder would watch over her what she says, fearing she would be punished. Beyond strange.
No better than North Korea. Not at all.
Singapore is a shiny dystopian asshole dictatorship void of fr
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Also where they have a tight control of the nation's internet, China style and so if they don't like what you're posting, a few edits in a text file later, and *poof* you're site is as good as gone to anyone browsing the web in Singapore.
Are they granting themselves global authority? (Score:2)
The Government also plans to amend the Broadcasting Act next year, to ensure that websites which are hosted overseas but report on Singapore news are brought under the licensing framework as well.
How exactly are they going to enforce their Broadcasting Act for foreign media? Start sending their minuscule army around the globe?
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Duh! They've hired the MPAA/RIAA to do their off-shore enforcement for them.
Just ask Kim Dotcom how that works.
Singapore : Why You So Like That? (Score:1)
p0rn (Score:1)
Singapore is losing credibility (Score:2)