A Week in Review: November 26, 2018
This week in review, Internet Monitor covers Facebook takedowns, surveillance at a Chinese university and a Freedom House report on Internet and digital media freedom.
This week in review, Internet Monitor covers Facebook takedowns, surveillance at a Chinese university and a Freedom House report on Internet and digital media freedom.
This week in review, Internet Monitor covers President Trump’s appeal on a ruling about blocking users on Twitter, Internet shutdowns in India, Russian fines on VPN users, and Facebook sharing user data with a Chinese telecommunications company.
This week in review, Internet Monitor covers Uganda's new social media tax, Papua New Guinea's proposal to ban Facebook, and a Kenyan court's ruling on the new cybercrime law.
this week, Internet Monitor covers the Santa Clara Principles for content moderation, SMEX monitoring Internet shutdowns in MENA, and activist reports of telecom disruptions in Moscow.
This week in review, Internet Monitor covers YouTube's first Community Guidelines transparency report, Facebook releasing its internal content moderation guidelines, and Citizen Lab's report on Netsweeper Internet filtering.
This week in review, IM covers Apple's transfer of Chinese iCloud data to a Chinese firm, Stanford CIS essays from Laws, Borders, and Speech Conference, and OONI probe's new messenger app tests.
This week, Internet Monitor covers a new report from Internet Society on Africa's Internet Economy, social media blocks in Pakistan, and a Detroit grassroots program bridging the digital divide.
This week, the Internet Monitor covers the Moscow protests for Internet freedom, Iran’s increased efforts to filter social media, Verizon’s flirt with net neutrality violations, and a Global Voices study on Facebook’s Free Basics.
The United Kingdom will announce plans on July 24 to tighten restrictions on sites containing sexually explicit content. These plans will require all sites designated as pornographic to...
This week, Internet Monitor takes a look at the continued investigation into the Mexican government's alleged spyware usage against private citizens, Russia's demands of Telegram, and a coalition of social media companies to combat terrorism.