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Facebook Censoring Images of the Prophet Muhammad In Turkey 228

An anonymous reader writes: Immediately following the Charlie Hebdo attack, Mark Zuckerberg said, "... this is what we all need to reject — a group of extremists trying to silence the voices and opinions of everyone else around the world. I won't let that happen on Facebook. I'm committed to building a service where you can speak freely without fear of violence." Now, Facebook has begun censoring images of the prophet Muhammad in Turkey. According to the Washington post, "It's an illustration, perhaps, of how extremely complicated and nuanced issues of online speech really are. It's also conclusive proof of what many tech critics said of Zuckerberg's free-speech declaration at the time: Sweeping promises are all well and good, but Facebook's record doesn't entirely back it up." To be fair to Zuckerberg and Facebook, the company must obey the law of any country in which it operates. But it stands in stark contrast to the principles espoused by its founder.
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Facebook Censoring Images of the Prophet Muhammad In Turkey

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  • Simple (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sycodon ( 149926 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @09:45AM (#48923367)

    Zuckerburg is a whore who doesn't want Turkey to ban Facebook.

    • Re:Simple (Score:5, Funny)

      by NotDrWho ( 3543773 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @09:57AM (#48923525)

      Now, now, there is no need to insult whores like that.

      • About 'whoring' (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Zuckerburg and his facebook are far from the only guilty party on 'whoring'

        Take that 'do not evil' company, Google, for example ... publicly they seemed to champion the users' rights by fighting against the Chinese communist, but then they 'whore' themselves to the NSA --- and recent revelations that Google disclosing emails and all the other details of 3 people who work for Wikileaks to the Obama fascist league isn't a comforting news either

        Take Microsoft, they 'whore' themselves to the NSA to the extend t

    • Re:Simple (Score:5, Insightful)

      by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @10:13AM (#48923683)

      There is nothing simple about ethics with international business.
      Things that ethically right in one culture can be a huge issue in an other.
      Many European countries have laws about Hate speech.
      The US has against with Pedophilia.
      In some countries bribes are just part of doing business. In others it is quite illegal.
      Countries will tax you for things that other countries would consider as overstepping bounds.
      Some countries lets things go by without legal controls that others find monstrous.

      If you are going to be doing international business, you need to be sensitive to your own ideals, as well as the ideals of your new customer base.
      Our American Ideals of nearly full freedom of speech, vs. Turkey ideals of limited speech. Are clashing. So if Zuckerberg just said no. They will not operate in Turkey, and the users will be loss of a medium to spread the areas of free speech that they do enjoy. If Zuckerberg agrees then Facebook stays operational, and while taking heat from the culture who doesn't like to see any speech censored, is allowing the culture to have better tools to share the free speech that they are entitled too.

      • In some countries bribes are just part of doing business. In others it is quite illegal.

        So, corruption is okay as long as it is culturally acceptable? I see.

        Greed trumps ethics and morals.

        • It is culturally acceptable in the US, especially when dealing with Congress and other Politicians, if done according to political campaign contribution laws.

          • It is culturally acceptable in the US, especially when dealing with Congress and other Politicians, if done according to political campaign contribution laws.

            No, it's not. It's legally permissible. That says nothing about whether it is culturally acceptable.

            • by OhPlz ( 168413 )

              The public doesn't generally hold politicians accountable for accepting these bribes, so therefore it is culturally acceptable.

            • We keep voting the same people, same two corrupt parties into office. If that doesn't signify cultural acceptance I don't know what does.

        • Re:Simple (Score:4, Informative)

          by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @12:30PM (#48925255)

          Ethics and Morals are based on the cultural norms.

          Taking a bribe is consider corruption in our culture. In another it may be considered payment for expedited services. In America we Tip our servers, the size of our tips are based on what we figure was the quality of the service. This motivates the server to try to exceed expectation. The only difference between this and a bribe is payment after service is performed and not before.

          • Maybe it's the same qualitatively but I think it's different quantitatively. In many countries, bribes don't grant expedited service so much as lack of a bribe guarantees that a government official will actively hinder whatever you are trying to do. Which brings us to another point, that we don't typically tip government officials in the US (and if we do it's called bribery).

            Don't get me wrong. Tipping sucks. But bribery is worse. And any country where bribery is a cultural norm is shittier because of

          • by swb ( 14022 )

            Taking a bribe is consider corruption in our culture. In another it may be considered payment for expedited services.

            Except that bribes are almost never for "expedited" services, they are given to gatekeepers who won't provide the service they're supposed to provide without them. Can you give me one concrete example of an official who accepts bribes for better service but will still perform the service in a reasonable time without them? Or isn't using some kind of negative outcome (often criminal charges)

          • by mjwx ( 966435 )

            Ethics and Morals are based on the cultural norms.

            Taking a bribe is consider corruption in our culture. In another it may be considered payment for expedited services. In America we Tip our servers, the size of our tips are based on what we figure was the quality of the service.

            In other developed countries, we pay service people a wage they can live on. We do this to prevent employers from abusing the employee's situation and because not every service person is customer facing, meaning a large number of minimum wage workers do not have the opportunity to earn tips.

            Because the person manning a checkout at Walmart as well as many other minimum wage positions do not get tips, we consider the notion that tips make up for minimum wages that aren't enough to live off to be abusive an

      • Re:Simple (Score:4, Insightful)

        by JohnFen ( 1641097 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @01:56PM (#48926145)

        There is nothing simple about ethics with international business.
        Things that ethically right in one culture can be a huge issue in an other.

        I don't see how that makes the ethics complex. It's very simple: ethics are personal. If a company has a certain set of ethics, they'll adhere to them regardless of what nation they're operating in. If the law prevents that, then they'll avoid doing business there.

        Simple.

        If a company is willing to do something in any nation, that is an expression of the company's ethics. In this case, Facebook has declared loud and clear that they have no problem with political censorship.

        So if Zuckerberg just said no. They will not operate in Turkey, and the users will be loss of a medium to spread the areas of free speech that they do enjoy.

        This is the exact line of reasoning by which so many companies justify supporting child labor, sweatshops, political repression, and so on. It's a bullshit argument.

      • by mjwx ( 966435 )

        If you are going to be doing international business, you need to be sensitive to your own ideals, as well as the ideals of your new customer base.

        This.

        If you want to sell your products and services in a different country, you have to make sure they're appealing to the people of that country.

        This is why Ford continually is unable to sell many of its flagship cars like the Mustang and F series utes outside the US despite repeatedly trying. The fact is, no one in Europe wants a 5L V8 that only produces

    • Re:Simple (Score:5, Insightful)

      by circletimessquare ( 444983 ) <circletimessquar ... m ['gma' in gap]> on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @10:16AM (#48923719) Homepage Journal

      it's not that simple

      if he doesn't follow the laws turkey bans facebook. a facebook clone in turkey pops up instead. now all those connections to the outside world are greatly diminished. turkey becomes a social silo that stagnates

      and so all the valuable positive subtle free speech influences that aren't live wire topics like muhammad's face are lost

      by following turkey's authoritarian freedom crushing instructions that would otherwise get facebook banned, facebook remains influential in turkey in a positive way, in more subtle ways

      you can't think of these nuanced complex issues in such blockheaded black-or-white "my way or the highway" rigid ways. that makes you something like turkey's authoritarianism actually

      • Re:Simple (Score:4, Interesting)

        by DarkOx ( 621550 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @10:24AM (#48923777) Journal

        Facebook could do something pincipled though. They could setup all kinds of proxies make encryption easy. Provide tools for evading filters etc. All things that would be perfectly legal here. They could flaunt the law in Turkey and just keep their people out of Turkey. Mark could consider his name on their most wanted heretics list or whatever to be a badge of honer.

        Naturally if FB was effective and underground scene in some of these freedom hating nations they would not be able to make much add revenue from business there though.

        It really is a pretty black and white issue, you think censorship is okay or your think its never okay. Only the ideas some would seek to censor are the ones that ever needed protection in the first place.

        • they'll start blocking proxies

          not possible?

          http://yro.slashdot.org/story/... [slashdot.org]

          yes, theoretically impossible to be watertight, but the whack-a-mole effort makes for a degraded dangerous existence for those seeking to use proxies

          so you effectively banned facebook by forcing users to exert so much effort it's not worth it

          culturally and politically, you've also antagonized turkey to go more silo

          look at the constant "west is destroying us" ultranationalist bullshit in russia nowadays as an example of how turkey co

          • Re:Simple (Score:4, Funny)

            by TsuruchiBrian ( 2731979 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @02:48PM (#48926627)

            Why do you think in such black and white terms? That slow change is the only way that change can happen? Why is it that the Turkish government's authoritarianism can *only* be eroded gradually?

            You know what also destroys mountains? Meteorites.

      • by mccrew ( 62494 )
        I would further add that it is not the job of Facebook, or Americans, to bring about the necessary change in Turkey. Sure we should advocate for it, but it can only be lasting when undertaken by those with "skin in the game."
      • Re:Simple (Score:5, Interesting)

        by im_thatoneguy ( 819432 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @12:49PM (#48925489)

        I agree with this sentiment to a large extent. We don't get mad when TCP/IP is used in an authoritarian country. At some point Facebook is like any other infrastructure on the internet--it's a conduit. I don't really blame Vint Cerf or Cisco for the great firewall of China. If anything the fact that Turkey's government has to go to Facebook and demand that they filter content is already a win of sorts in an authoritarian anti-free speech zone. If we replaced Facebook with something like email the Turkish could simply block all TCP/IP traffic that matches banned images or words. At least this way you have a company like Facebook running the filtering which will presumably do the very absolute minimum filtering required by law as opposed the absolute maximum that they can get away with before a court orders them to back off on the filtering.

      • it's not that simple

        The facebook clone actually causes widesrpread public outrage at the loss of the real (and hypothetically principled) Facebook, and the Turkish government is overthrown and replaced with a secular democracy that forges a path for all other authoritarian islamic countries towards logic and reason and away from superstition.

        No it's not black and white and nobody knows what's going to happen. The idea that facebook censoring itself in turkey is leading to the best possible outcome is not a

      • by following turkey's authoritarian freedom crushing instructions that would otherwise get facebook banned, facebook remains influential in turkey in a positive way, in more subtle ways

        Not a very nuanced view, and even complex matters can be surprisingly simple if you have values. -- "by following turkey's authoritarian freedom crushing instructions that would otherwise get facebook banned," facebook remains in business there. This and nothing else matters to corporations. Please don't pretend that FBs miss

    • Would a whore censor boobies in the US, even though there is no law requiring such censorship?

      He just wants to make a mainstream product, which means conforming to the mainstream social norms - no matter what country you are operating in. This is not a big deal.

      • He just wants to make a mainstream product, which means conforming to the mainstream social norms - no matter what country you are operating in. This is not a big deal.

        I take it you do not understand the concept of the tyranny of the majority. It's not exactly an insignificant issue, particularly when it is used to prohibit speech by whoever isn't popular with the majority as Facebook does.

    • by X10 ( 186866 )

      I think my wife is a part time Muslim... Once a month she is offended by everything!

      Hey, now Turkey will ban /.

    • by Udom ( 978789 )
      I had a post deleted on The Guardian for having referenced the 4,100 year old Epic of Gilgamesh, a Babylonian text that presents an earlier version of Noah and the Ark than that found in the Talmud, Bible or Koran. It appears that was considered antisemitic.
    • by jonnyj ( 1011131 )

      It's easy to shout "Yahboo!" at Zuckerburg, but content filtering is a complex business.

      I am not a Facebook user, but I believe it already applies restrictions to content that offends tastes in the USA and Europe. You won't get very far if you attempt to use the platform to distribute child pornography, photographs of erect male members or detailed examinations of the human clitoris. Many cultures, both present and historic, see nothing wrong in these images; regardless, all Facebook users must comply with

  • No. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by eldavojohn ( 898314 ) * <eldavojohnNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @09:46AM (#48923389) Journal

    To be fair to Zuckerberg and Facebook, the company must obey the law of any country in which it operates.

    No. He came out in support of a universal maxim and then went back to his board who showed him X dollars of income they get by operating in Turkey. Just like the revenue lost when Google left mainland China. Instead of sacrificing that revenue to some other social network in Turkey run by cowards, he became a coward himself in the name of money. It is an affront to the deaths and memory of the Charlie Hebdo editors. His refusal could have worked as leverage for social change in Turkey but now it will not.

    So no, your statement isn't fair to Zuckerberg and his company and the platinum backscratcher he gets to keep with "TURKEY" inscribed on it. Fuck that greedy bastard and his petty meaningless lip service.

    • Actually...

      ... this is what we all need to reject — a group of extremists trying to silence the voices and opinions of everyone else around the world. I won't let that happen on Facebook.

      Facebook hasn't silenced the voices and opinions of everyone around the world. It's just applied some tact in Turkey, where culture and leadership don't tolerate certain things. As for extremists coming from Turkey to blow up Chicken, well, people in Chicken can post pictures offensive to Rude and Reno at their own peril.

      • Facebook hasn't silenced the voices and opinions of everyone around the world.

        Just selected people in Turkey. For now.

    • No. He came out in support of a universal maxim

      99% of people that came out in support of free speech after Charlie Hebdo were hypocrites, so it is silly to single out Zuck. France bans many forms of speech. If Charlie Hebdo had ridiculed Jews by drawing cartoons about the Holocaust, they likely would have been arrested instead of lionized. But, in France, Muslims are fair game. During the big march in Paris, the Saudi ambassador was welcomed, and marched along side other world leaders. Hollande shook his hand. Meanwhile, Raif Badawi was being offi

    • by OhPlz ( 168413 )

      Devil's advocate..

      If they pull out of Turkey, what impact on free speech does that have? Do the people living there have any equivalent means of mass communication? Social media can help foster change, but if the major social media offerings all leave an area in protest, what does that leave the people?

  • Really? (Score:4, Informative)

    by ibpooks ( 127372 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @09:47AM (#48923403) Homepage

    To be fair to Zuckerberg and Facebook, the company must obey the law of any country in which it operates.

    No it doesn't. Big companies don't obey laws unless it's cheaper to do so than not. Slashdot in particular can't stop fellating Uber over what is probably a largely illegal operation. Comcast, Verizon, Microsoft, and basically all of the rest routinely violate laws as they see fit, pay a fine and move on.

    • Re:Really? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by CrimsonAvenger ( 580665 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @10:06AM (#48923599)

      Slashdot in particular can't stop fellating Uber over what is probably a largely illegal operation.

      Hmm, "largely illegal operation"...

      I think "arguably" is a better term than "largely", but let that go.

      The notion that people should automatically oppose "illegal operations" is interesting. Mostly because so many precedents come to mind.

      For instance, assisting slaves to escape from the South was quite illegal. Did its illegality make it wrong?

      Or there was that whole hiding Jews from the Nazis thing....

      Yah, those are rather incendiary examples, but history makes clear that opposing bad laws is a necessary prerequisite to getting them removed.

      Disclaimer: Do I think that Cab Medallions are a good idea? No, I think they're designed to limit competition (just like franchises for cable or internet do). Do I think Uber should be legal? Yeah, because I'm opposed to buying legislation to limit competition in general....

    • Re:Really? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by msobkow ( 48369 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @10:19AM (#48923735) Homepage Journal

      Only you ignorant Americans think your laws apply to the whole world. The rest of the world just demands that foreign companies obey local laws while doing business there.

      And if you think local laws don't apply because you're an American, you're just a fucking retard.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward
        "The rest of the world just demands that foreign companies obey local laws while doing business there."

        If you really believe that, you might need to consider flipping your expletive around. Many in the world scream "Death to America/France/Netherlands/etc" when there is a bad depiction of Mohammed (or any depiction). Is that "just demanding that foreign companies obey local laws while doing business there"? No, that is stating that you ... way over there and not in my town/city/country/region ... need
      • Re:Really? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by NixieBunny ( 859050 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @11:52AM (#48924733) Homepage
        The same argument can be made against the Muslims who think that their religion applies to people outside of it. I am not Muslim, so I am not going to hell for displaying a mockery of their prophet. After all, would the Muslims want to be held accountable to the rules of every other religion in the world?

        This is the real problem, and it's on all religious people to behave as if every other religion (and every form of non-belief) is as valid as theirs is. Oh, and Thou Shalt Not Kill.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by paiute ( 550198 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @09:54AM (#48923483)
    Zuck announced that Saudia Arabia has demanded that he cut his hand off for stealing the idea of Facebook. China wants him to shoot himself in the head and send them the price of the bullet for monopolizing their national social media. ISIS demanded that he cut his own head off, just because. Thailand is suing him for war crimes for letting their King be ridiculed on Facebook. Alabama is sending sheriff's deputies to arrest him because a state legislature saw the edge of a nipple on some random teenager's profile picture.
  • by NotDrWho ( 3543773 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @09:56AM (#48923507)

    the company must obey the law of any country in which it operates

    And if Saudi Arabia ordered you to hand over women employees for beheading, would you do that too Mark?

  • by CanadianRealist ( 1258974 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @09:58AM (#48923543)

    After hearing about the grilled cheese sandwich that looks like the virgin Mary I read this headline and the image that comes to mind is a roast turkey where the pattern of browning on the skin sort of looks like an image of the prophet Muhammad.

    Then I think Facebook is being biased. If they allowed pictures of the virgin Mary grilled cheese then they shouldn't censor pictures of the Muhammad roast turkey.

    Then I imagine extremists shouting "death to the turkey!"

    (News can me so much more entertaining if you allow yourself to be creative.)

    • ...sort of like the time that some guy saw jesus' face in a piece of chocolate.

      talk about "my sweet lord" !

      aka, "the immaculate confection"

      (shamelessly stolen. so there.)

    • After hearing about the grilled cheese sandwich that looks like the virgin Mary I read this headline and the image that comes to mind is a roast turkey where the pattern of browning on the skin sort of looks like an image of the prophet Muhammad.

      Then I think Facebook is being biased. If they allowed pictures of the virgin Mary grilled cheese then they shouldn't censor pictures of the Muhammad roast turkey.

      Then I imagine extremists shouting "death to the turkey!"

      (News can me so much more entertaining if you allow yourself to be creative.)

      The thing is, no one would know it was an image of the prophet Mohammed because no one knows what he looked like.

      And the worst part is, how will Facebooks system be able to tell the difference between an image thats 'supposed to be that one Mohammed who was the prophet' and an image thats of one of the millions of Muslims around the world whose name is 'Mohammed'??

    • Well now you're zeroing in on what the South Park writers were alluding to with their Cartoon Wars episode. The media likes to self-censor images of the prophet and pretend it's about being respectful to Islam and Muslims. The same media has no problem showing images of Jesus and George Bush defecating on an American flag. That's why you know they're only pretending to be respectful, when what they really are is frightened. You see, most Christians won't try to kill you for being blasphemous about Jesus.

  • this is muhammed. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @09:59AM (#48923549)

    (((:~(>
    The above emoticon is muhammed

  • by jbssm ( 961115 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @10:00AM (#48923561)
    If FB started censoring everything that offends Islam we would be back to a text terminal... and I'm sure that the Mullahs would most probably find a motive of offense in that as well.
  • by some old guy ( 674482 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @10:02AM (#48923569)

    Is that anything like Jebus on a bagel?

  • by anonymousJUGGERNAUT ( 909643 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @10:06AM (#48923591)
    What constitutes an image of Muhammad? I mean, no one really knows what he looked like, right? And even if they did know, people have look-alikes...so it seems for something to be an "image of the Prophet" requires it to be labeled as such. But how far does that go? If I drew a stick figure, and wrote "Muhammad" under it, would that count? What if I drew a very detailed and accurate sketch of someone presently alive, let's say my friend Bill, but labelled it "the Prophet Muhammad," would that count? How are these things decided?
    • by ledow ( 319597 )

      I see where you went wrong.

      You're trying to apply logic to religion.

      Someone needs to signal you a false-start before you go any further than that.

  • by ledow ( 319597 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @10:06AM (#48923603) Homepage

    Can anyone ever remember an instance where a company pulled out of something because it went against their ethos? I can't think of one.

    Every time it's something like censorship, or threats to pull out of a certain market, etc. it's NEVER happened, and they always end up compromising their principles for the sake of sales.

    I get that's what business is supposed to do, but it just means I automatically ignore ANY such attempt at pretending a company can have an ethos at all.

    Just for once, I'd love to see a company, especially a tech company that espouses its freedom credentials as a selling point, to say "No, sorry, we can't do that, we'll just have to stop doing business with them". Can you imagine if Facebook just turned itself off in Turkey? Surely the uproar alone would mean that it would come in a less-censored form?

    I just can't think of an instance where a company refused business because it was morally right to do so (possible exception - supposedly - of The Co-Operative in the UK but are they are company or a co-operative?).

  • All the issues of free expression and if Facebook is or is not advancing the human condition by enabling Turks to communicate, vs likely being banned by refusing to filter on principle of free expression; does this even help.

    I am not an expert on Islamic culture but I thought the prohibition was of depicting the "profit". Wont FB basically have to just ban the name Mohammad, which would offend lots of people. Otherwise what stops someone from posting a steaming cow pie, and tagging it "Mohammad the profit

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Oh, you mean Islam's Prophet Muhammad?

    Most people don't recognize him as a prophet at all.

    Do newspapers refer to the lord jesus christ? The messiah jesus christ? No.

    Further, how do people know what Muhammad looked like so they can block the images?

    Here's a portrait of Muhammad:

    O
    /H\
    / \

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @10:09AM (#48923637)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by kaizendojo ( 956951 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @10:10AM (#48923645)

    To be fair to Zuckerberg and Facebook, the company must obey the law of any country in which it operates.

    Fine. Then pull out of Turkey. Really, how much is that going to cost you in losses?

  • by Carcass666 ( 539381 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @10:10AM (#48923649)

    This idea that all speech must be viewed by all people is a little odd. When I go onto Facebook once in a blue boon to check on friends I used to work with in the Philippines, I am not bombarded by explicit sexual content. No, nobody in my group of friends are going to post about a rimjob, but given the random crap that does come up, I'm pretty sure there is a lot of energy at Facebook to keep the pr0n noise down.

    There are Muslims who consider pictures of their prophet as offensive as a picture of bukkake. The vast majority of them are not crazy Islamists that like to blow things up and slaughter innocent people (which is good for the rest of us non-Muslims). Rather than centralized, blanket, censorship, though, I'd rather see something like this...

    1. Facebook and other social networking services put their resources into tagging content (religiously offensive, sexually explicit, drug use and other types of content that users often find unpleasant)

    When a user registers for these services, a default list of tagged content to block is set up, based upon their region, gender, religious affiliation, etc. which the user can modify

    • Doh! Accidentally clicked submit during preview, last line should have "2. " in front of it. "blue boon" should be "blue moon"

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      There are Muslims who consider pictures of their prophet as offensive as a picture of bukkake.

      100 points to the first person to post a bukkake pic of the Prophet Muhammad on Facebook.

    • by Bongo ( 13261 )

      Well many of these regimes talk about free speech as if it was a "Western" thing, but it only happened to arise there.

      Free speech is a universal principle, and the reason it is universal is that the individual human being is not a Moslem or an American or Chinese, he or she is a human being. The individual. And that's who has the rights. This is why Mullahs or Bishops shouldn't be able to dictate what you say.

      Then, again considering all people across the planet, what things are universally limits on free sp

  • by msobkow ( 48369 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @10:14AM (#48923693) Homepage Journal

    Look at how they censor pictures of breasts from the whole site to pander to American "morals", when most of the world has no problem with nudity.

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @10:16AM (#48923717)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @10:29AM (#48923805)

    --------------------> .

    As seen from a very long distance.

  • The notion that Facebook supports free expression is really quite laughable. You don't even need to be a government to get Facebook to censor images for you. Their content-reporting system allows one self-appointed censor to complain anonymously about an image they don't like (such as two clothed men about to kiss [pinknews.co.uk], or PG13-level partial male nudity), and if the complaint gets assigned to someone equally homophobic, the image gets deleted and the person who posted it gets blocked, with no effective method o

  • by dAzED1 ( 33635 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2015 @11:11AM (#48924213) Journal
    If you're not Muslim, why the fark are you saying "the Prophet" Muhammad? Why would you grant that honorific if you don't yourself believe it? How would that be different than saying "Jesus the Messiah" while not Christian? And hey, if you do believe it "soulskill" then hey, why not, but I've been seeing this become more and more common among journalist at (theoretically) real - and thus, presumably impartial - news agencies. You know, ones that wouldn't say "Jesus the Messiah" and "Buddha the Enlightened One"
    • Well, there are a lot of non-Christians, and non-practicing Christians, who say "Jesus Christ" which translates to "Jesus the Messiah"...

  • So Zuckerberg is a bit of a hypocrite. This isn't exactly a new or rare thing. At least a hypocrite concedes that there is a moral system they should be following and can be pressured into following that moral code. The people who aren't hypocrites tend to be because such because there's no longer reason to bother hiding their vicious natures.
  • If you can't post an image of Muhammad, how does anyone even know what the hell he looks like? I could post an image of a random Arab and it might look enough like the prophet to be banned, but how the fuck would I know? How the fuck would FB know?
  • I'm not a Zuck fanboi. I actually feel like Facebook is as invasive as the NSA, datamining your every word. I'm very careful with what I put on there; little that isn't already in my public LinkedIn profile.

    However, the situation with Turkey isn't as cut and dried as some people want to make it out. Is Zuckerberg being two-faced, saying one thing and doing another? Not necessarily. He can have a strong opinion that censorship is wrong, at the same time being FORCED to do it (to the minimum extent possi

    • by radja ( 58949 )

      does he think censorship is wrong? no. Facebook already censors. There is no difference between censoring breast pics and pics of some muhammed.

  • "When I visit a mosque, I show my respect by taking off my shoes. I follow the customs, just as I do in a church, synagogue or other holy place. But if a believer demands that I, as a nonbeliever, observe his taboos in the public domain, he is not asking for my respect, but for my submission." --Flemming Rose

A committee takes root and grows, it flowers, wilts and dies, scattering the seed from which other committees will bloom. -- Parkinson

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