果冻传媒app官方

Table of Contents

Alarming new legislation in Canada, worsening repression in Hong Kong, and online global takedowns emerging from India

Phrase "Free Speech Dispatch" in white set against a black background

Censorship doesn鈥檛 respect borders. 

The threats to free speech in one country, and the conditions or events that cultivate them, can grow into regional or global censorship campaigns, from suppression of commentary about the Israel-Hamas war to the silencing of exiled critics of the Russian and Chinese governments. Even voices in ostensibly free countries can be stifled. 

That鈥檚 why FIREis launching the Free Speech Dispatch, a new series covering some of the censorship trends and challenges around the world. In each edition, we鈥檒l help readers glean a better understanding of the global free speech landscape. 

In this entry, we鈥檒l look at some long-developing censorship trends that have been worsening or even expanding outside their country or area of origin, and we鈥檒l examine some eyebrow-raising legislation to the north of the United States.

Oh, Canada 鈥

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau standing before a row of Canadian flags
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

A  purportedly intended to combat harmful content and child victimization on the internet is raising red flags for advocates worried about the breadth of the bill and the changes it will make to Canada鈥檚 criminal code and the Canadian Human Rights Act. 

A number of provisions within the Online Harms Act are cause for serious concern. It would update the criminal code, for example, so that 鈥淸e]very person who advocates or promotes genocide is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for life,鈥 a  currently punishable by 鈥渁 term of not more than five years.鈥 

The past few months alone should make crystal clear the perils of criminalizing the promotion or advocacy of genocide, especially with the potential for such punitive consequences. 

It鈥檚 not uncommon to see both supporters and critics of Israel鈥檚 military action in Gaza face accusations of supporting genocide. Does chanting 鈥From the River to the Sea, Palestine Will be Free鈥 amount to advocacy for genocide? What about offering a speaking invitation to a 鈥溾 IDF combat reservist? It may depend on who you ask and whether you asked the question an hour ago or a year ago. When it comes to discussion of major geopolitical events, war, terrorism, and violence, governments that seek to protect the right to free expression can and should punish speech that crosses the line into incitement or true threats. 

But they must also understand that laws governing expression must account for the turbulence and complexity of ever-changing political debates. Failing to do so risks a chilling effect or the outright censorship of vital discussions about current events. 

Canadian officials should reconsider these and other provisions of the bill, and other countries seeking to address online child victimization and threats of violence should be careful not to repeat this legislation鈥檚 errors.

Another worrying provision in the bill is its proposals to amend the  so that 鈥渢o communicate or cause to be communicated hate speech鈥 online when 鈥渓ikely to foment detestation or vilification of an individual or group of individuals on the basis of a prohibited ground of discrimination鈥 would be classified as 鈥渁 discriminatory practice.鈥 The recommended revisions to the act also suggest that past expression would qualify 鈥渟o long as the hate speech remains public and the person can remove or block access to it,鈥 presumably meaning old posts that remain online could be fair game.

The  then calls for the establishment of a Canadian Human Rights Tribunal to investigate complaints of discriminatory practices which, as defined earlier, include the communication of online hate speech. The tribunal would have the power to order those found responsible to 鈥渃ease the discriminatory practice鈥 and prevent it from occurring again, provide 鈥渃ompensation of not more than $20,000 to any victim identified in the communication that constituted the discriminatory practice,鈥 and pay large potential fines to the government. Affixing such a potentially large price tag to a vaguely-defined hate speech provision could no doubt chill online speech.

These are far from the only troubling provisions the proposed online harms legislation puts forth, and it鈥檚 evident that this bill that promises to address harms caused by speech on the internet will instead risk creating a new set of problems offline

This legislation is  at its second reading in the House of Commons. Canadian officials should reconsider these and other provisions of the bill, and other countries seeking to address online child victimization and threats of violence should be careful not to repeat this legislation鈥檚 errors.

Crushing dissent in Hong Kong

In 2020, Beijing imposed a  on Hong Kong, plunging a knife into the heart of Hong Kong鈥檚 energetic human rights and pro-democracy protest movement. As FIRE has highlighted repeatedly, the law wasn鈥檛 just meant to punish activists within the city 鈥 it was also written intentionally to threaten Beijing鈥檚 critics around the world. 

Democracy protest in Hong Kong

Pressure continues against campus critics of China

News

Student group claims UChicago鈥檚 event with Hong Kong activist Nathan Law 'falls outside the purviews of free speech.'

Read More

And now, nearly four years later, the city has speedily pushed through its own version of a national security law, the , in just  The bill claims to address crimes like treason and espionage but will target much more and, like its predecessor, will undoubtedly be used to diminish what鈥檚 left of dissent in Hong Kong. The legislation  鈥渁n act, word or publication that has a seditious intention,鈥 which includes 鈥渁n intention to bring a Chinese citizen, Hong Kong permanent resident or a person in the HKSAR into hatred, contempt or disaffection鈥 against government institutions in mainland China and Hong Kong. 

It also seeks to  activists who have left Hong Kong and their financial supporters and bans organizations the secretary for security believes may harm Hong Kong鈥檚 national security. Ronny Tong Ka-wah, a member of the Executive Council of Hong Kong, has even  that priests who hear confessions from alleged violators of Hong Kong鈥檚 national security law will risk charges themselves should they fail to report them to authorities. 

There are seemingly no limits to where Hong Kong and Chinese authorities will pursue their critics 鈥 even abroad, and even in the confessional.

Indian court ruling with global consequences

WATCH VIDEO: Court Order Leads to Global Censorship

Free expression faces a range of threats in India today, including censorship of , crackdowns on , and increasingly strained . But what鈥檚 notable isn鈥檛 just the fact that free speech is on the decline in India 鈥 it鈥檚 also beginning to affect what people outside India can say and see. This is part of an increasingly worrying trend of authoritarian speech policies dictating how companies act on a global scale, not just within the countries dictating those laws.

That trend intensified in recent weeks with the development that news outlet Reuters  a deeply researched report, 鈥溾 about Appin, an Indian company it accused of acting as a 鈥渉ack for hire.鈥 As I wrote for FIRE鈥檚 Newsdesk last month, the Association of Appin Training Centers, a group claiming to be associated with Appin, obtained a  against Reuters in December 2023, forcing the outlet to take down the piece. 

India Map on technology abstract background

Why is an Indian court order determining what you can read on the internet?

Blog

What a lawsuit in India can tell us about the future of global censorship and free speech.

Read More

Reuters complied, and in doing so took the piece down globally rather than using geo-blocking tools to limit access only within India. And the AOATC took this court order and ran with it, telling outlets in other countries, who were not named in the suit or involved in the litigation, that they should remove their coverage of AOATC. Contemporaneously, the co-founder of Appin, Rajat Khare, has been  an effort to pressure outlets to remove reporting about himself and Appin 鈥 with the assistance of American defamation firm Clare Locke LLP. 

In some cases, this global censorship campaign is working. Even the Internet Archive  its copy of Reuters鈥 report on Appin after  a letter from Khare鈥檚 attorneys.

It鈥檚 alarming on its own that a court order in India managed to make waves far beyond the borders of India and the named parties in the lawsuit. But what鈥檚 even more worrying is what this may signal for the future of free expression on the internet, where legal protections for speech in one country may ultimately do little to protect against threats to speech from another. 

Keep an eye out for our next installment of the Free Speech Dispatch. 

Recent Articles

FIRE鈥檚 award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Share