The Netizen Report offers an international snapshot of challenges, victories, and emerging trends in Internet rights around the world.
The U.S. and EU Internet industries are still reeling from the recent strikedown of Safe Harbor provisions between the EU and U.S., which facilitated the transfer of data between Europe and the U.S., despite the higher standards for privacy required in the EU.
The EU Court of Justice struck down the agreement in early October, expressing concern that U.S. government surveillance, as illustrated by the Snowden revelations, rendered any safeguards instituted by U.S. firms inadequate if not entirely moot. U.S. companies are beginning to institute back-up plans, with some creating new data centers in the EU and others seeking to modify their systems at home.
Microsoft put forward a four-step proposal to address what Chief Legal Officer Brad Smith called the “privacy Rubik’s cube” of balancing privacy rights, public safety and the global Internet. In a blog post, Smith wrote:
Ukraine rolls out Russian-style Internet blacklist
Ukraine’s Interior Minister announced plans to establish a registry of websites blocked for distributing “forbidden content.” Websites featuring pirated content violating copyright, child pornography, malware and viruses, and phishing content will be listed on the registry, though it’s unclear how such a blacklist would be instituted or whether court approval would be required to block a site.
Bahraini activist and mother faces prison for insulting the king
Zainab Al-Khawaja was sentenced by the Bahrain Court of Appeal to a year in prison for insulting the king of the wealthy Gulf nation and served a fine of roughly USD 8000. Zainab is the sister of internationally recognized Bahraini human rights defender Maryam Al-Khawaja, who serves as acting president of the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights.
Germany tweaks data retention requirements
The German Parliament passed a new data retention law requiring Internet and telecommunications companies to store their users’ metadata, including phone numbers, date and time of phone calls and text messages, location data and IP addresses—and make it available to law enforcement agencies when they investigate “severe crimes.” The bill looks marginally more protective of Germans’ privacy than a 2010 data retention law that was struck down by Germany’s constitutional court. This version excludes the content of communications, reduces the retention period from six months to 10 weeks, and requires that data be encrypted and stored in Germany. The bill still must pass the parliament’s upper house and be signed by the German president before it becomes law.
Netizen activism
Netizens from around the world marked the one-year anniversary of the imprisonment of Alaa Abd El Fattah, an icon of the Egyptian revolution who was given a five-year prison sentence for allegedly taking part in a protest, “assaulting a policeman and stealing his walkie talkie.” Abd El Fattah has been jailed under each of Egypt’s governments since (and including) the regime of Hosni Mubarak. To express their support for Alaa, allies changed their avatars to an infamous image of him and tweeted about his case and work as a human rights advocate throughout the day on October 27. In Cairo, Alaa’s family took the protest to the streets, standing in front of the Ittihadeya Presidential Palace to protest his imprisonment.
Ethiopia’s Zone9 bloggers, who were acquitted of terrorism charges and released from prison last week after spending 18 months behind bars, reflected on their experience in an article on Global Voices. They wrote:
Our detention tells a broader story of our country. We were able to witness the price of freedom of expression is dearly expensive. We are firsthand witnesses of injustice. More than anything, we have learned that a nation which is rampant with injustice is the foremost enemy of its law abiding citizens.
The bloggers also expressed their thanks for the support of their friends, family, media organizations, rights groups and the community who showed solidarity for their cause.
New Research
- Surveillance of Communications: A Legitimization Crisis and the Need for Transparency – Stockholm University