Onlinecensorship.org, a joint project of the Electronic Frontiers Foundation, EEF and Visualizing Impact, which tries to show how social networks moderate user-generated content, is now available in Spanish.Second Kim Carlson, its international coordinator "With the launch of the platform in the second most spoken language in the world we hope to reach several million people who have experienced censorship in social networks." With the incorporation of Spanish, there are more users than ever who can report on content removed on Facebook, Google+, Twitter, Instagram, Flickr and YouTube and use Onlinecensorship.org as a resource to claim for unfairly removed content.
Onlinecensorship.org is a project Founded in 2012 by Ramzi Jaber and Jillian C.York, who began to realize that some of their friends' posts disappeared from their Facebook pages.It all started when, years ago, The Coldplay musical group published a link to a OneWorld song , "Freedom for Palestine", a collaboration of many artists that generated about 7,000 comments, mostly supportive.Suddenly, the link disappeared, which led to accusations that the group had withdrawn due to criticism.It turned out that it was not Coldplay who removed the link, but Facebook, after it was denounced as "offensive" by many users.
The lack of a process to challenge facts thus led to the creation of Onlinecensorship.org, platform where users of social media sites can report the withdrawal of content. In 2014, he won the Knight News Challenge on strengthening the internet for free expression and innovation.
CENSURE IN SOCIAL NETWORKS
Since its launch in November 2015, Onlinecensorship.org has published its first results reports based on reports received from users.The report highlights who, what, and why of content removal of social media sites. By cataloging and analyzing accumulated cases of censorship on social networks, Onlinecensorship.org reveals trends in content removal , allowing you to understand the types of content that are being removed and learn how they are affecting different user communities.
MURALLED GARDENS
The controversies about content removal seem to explode every few weeks, with users complaining of censorship against political discourse, nudity, LGBT content, and many other issues.These discussions reveal a major problem: media sites Social media have a huge impact on the public sphere, but they are, in the final instance, private property of companies. Each company has its own rules and government systems that control user content, while providing little transparency on how these decisions are made.
If social media companies control both the medium and the message, without supervision and transparency, they will go from being a "walled garden" to a selectively pruned forest. Onlinecensorship.org-now also in English-can you help us better understand this game that some naive people describe as "disintermediation"
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