Week in Review: June 17, 2015

Internet Monitor 2016-08-25

Summary:

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Belgium: Privacy Watchdog Chews Facebook Out for Tracking System, Privacy Issues 

The Belgian Privacy Commission is concerned about how Facebook collects data from "like" and "share" buttons; in a lawsuit, it accuses the company of deliberately amassing personal data of members as well as nonmembers without properly disclosing how this data might be used. A spokeswoman for Facebook responded, "We are confident that there is no merit to the [commission’s] case." Other employees have argued that Facebook should only have to comply with regulators in Ireland, as that's the home of its European headquarters.

North Korea: Country's Only Cellphone Provider Discontinues 3G Service for Foreigners 

Koryolink (고려링크), North Korea's only cellphone provider, has turned off its 3G access for foreigners, citing a service outage as the main culprit; the company is a joint venture between the Egyptian company Global Telecom Holding and the state-owned Korea Post and Telecommunications Corporation. The shutoff came just a day after Pyongyang's Koryo Hotel caught fire, and so, some analysts have alleged that the goal is likely to limit the distribution of photos that might embarrass the government.

Pakistan: Finance Minister of Punjab Withdraws Plan to Tax Internet Services 

On June 15, 2015, the Finance Minister of Punjab announced that he had withdrawn a controversial Internet tax proposal. At the end of May, the Punjabi provincial government had announced its intention to introduce a 19.5% tax on all Internet services (via 3G, 4G, DSL and fiber) with a speed of 2Mb/s or higher; many opponents immediately worried that such a tax would hinder the adoption of 3G and 4G services. In response, a number of Pakistani digital companies and bloggers blacked out their websites to protest the proposed tax on Internet services.

Reddit: Administration Removes Five SubReddits; Users Respond 

On June 10, 2015, Reddit administrators revised the forum's community standards and decided to remove five subreddits, including r/fatpeoplehate; users opened subreddits to parse the idea of harassment, to propose other subreddits (i.e. /r/AdolfHitler, /r/WhitesWinFights) for similar bans, and to probe the social architecture of censorship. Reddit's management team posted this following message: "Our goal is to enable as many people as possible to have authentic conversations and share ideas and content on an open platform. We want as little involvement as possible in managing these interactions but will be involved when needed to protect privacy and free expression, and to prevent harassment. [...] We’re banning behavior, not ideas." Many Reddit users have responded to CEO Ellen Pao's decision by comparing her to Hitler and even starting a

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Date tagged:

08/25/2016, 15:44

Date published:

06/17/2015, 10:22