Internet and politics are now more interconnected than ever. Certain
aspects of it jump up in the everyday life of millions of people. Twitteris
without doubt one of those – but until a certain point. Generally, people
who consider themselves with a fair amount of digital technical skills, and
to good reason, see apparently no use in getting a Twitter account. For
instance in Italy despite smartphones and facebook and youtube and ipads,
even though it is in the media it is not widely adopted in the
population(no statistics provided just asking around, do you know what
twitter is? Try to ask beyond the 'social network' answer).


That said, teenagers in school post status updates and check themselves in
jail while being in classroom to symbolize the pseudo coercing / bonding
high school period. Tagging of pictures keeps the stream flowing and people
traverse their timeline endlessly in vortex of sharing online. Meeting on
Skype is a common activity during winter for long hours in a surreal
setting presenting the personification of the computer as an extension of
human senses. We live the majority part of the day online, we are the
nation of internet users replicating the principle of the web – the flow of
information.

The umbrella corporations of conservative censorship are on a rising tide
considering the medium range time. The SOPA PIPA ACTA tryptic is just the
basis for something stronger. When you start making exceptions on the
assertion “we are the good guys and we can do it because of XYZ while they
are the bad guys and they are doing it for the wrong reasons.” So all
animals are equal, but some are more equal than others. This situation
might not be too Orwellian but if we really are a country based on the flow
of information and to protect the interests of a powerful minority this
flow is interrupted not by sporadic activities but by the development of
dedicated machines automatically screening content, flagging, removing,
suspending and blocking access to it. The difference here is not in the
promulgation of laws not directly voted, both in modern democracies and
dictatorship this happens, the difference is in the response that we as
citizens - both of our own state and the web - can put in practice. If in
China you are arrested for blogging about censorship, in Europe we have the
right to flood into streets and voice our concerns, and we should, to stop
governments forcing ISPto spy on their citizens/users.

Its important to discuss the reasons why Twitter decided to allow filtering
some messages in specific countries(ie censor them), you don't need to have
HIV to know that it is vital to fight it. Twitter is being more open about
it and according to its policy, filtering out contents in a specific
country will be balanced by marking that content as censored in the rest of
the world and easily accessing the institution asking for it to be removed
with the reason for removal.  From a tool for freedom, Twitter will become
just a tool, like Gheddafi cutting water supplies to (luckily once)
revolting cities. Still, we must not let our guard down and denounce any
activity of spreading the "I don't hear, I don't see, I don't talk"
attitude embracing service providers around the world.

Multiple online services from Twitter to Filesonic have been shaken by the
uncontested and unconstitutional seizure of Megavideo - despite the wrong
doing and lascivious life of its founders, there was a total lack of due
process or selection of illegal content, everything will be removed,
copyright infringing or not. And this is the "good guys" doing it. If the
web has no physical or elected ambassadors to remove from a country
breaking its flow, we the people must stand up and speak in defence of our
love for Wikipedia, our positive feelings nurtured by Youtube, the cosiness
and security of a Skype conversation, the amplification and accessibility
of our opinions on Twitter, the assurance of our Facebook inboxes kept
private and the availability of all other online services, albeit not major
ones but still essential in our every day life. Only by proving our
presence in a common cause to protect the internet, educating friends and
sensibilizing our elected representatives can we disentangle our liberties
in the jungle of web diplomacy.

In the politics of programming Google needs to have a relationship with
China, Facebook with Pakistan, Twitter if it really has to. But compromises
is what degrades and makes possible politics. This online nation has
billions of citizens, all unique but expressing that uniqueness with
similar if not the same tools. So at 18 you can post away on Facebook, when
you are an ex-pat you meet your friends in international conference calls,
if your machine has collapsed because of a virus despite the fact that you
were behind firewall tomorrow you will install Linux, it is only logical
that we are going to be more dependant on the web in the future. We should
sensibilise and excite – we might not need to assert our liberty to protest
but it is rather important standing up for an nondeterministic and thriving
online life.

We must take the responsibility on ourselves and the people around us to
talk about protecting the internet, the neutrality and importance of an
open web *on social networks, in bars, at pubs, during lunches, in cinemas,
in stadiums, at home with your friends - whatever you say, say a lot!*


Full article is here:
http://www.studentsforfreeculture.eu/blog/2012/01/on-what-is-twitter-censoring-how-to-reject-that-censorship-what-we-love-online-and-why-we-should-protest-sopa-pipa-and-acta/
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