Turkey's Battle With Twitter
Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, the combative prime minister of Turkey, has called
Twitter "the worst menace to society," and he seems intent on
intimidating its users.
After the government blocked Twitter in
Turkey for two weeks recently, the company's executives met this week
with officials in Mr. Erdogan's administration to discuss its various
demands. The government has been railing against the company and other
Internet platforms like YouTube because some Turks have used them to
post leaks from a corruption investigation that has implicated prominent
political figures, including Mr. Erdogan, and their families. Two weeks
ago, Turkey's highest court ordered the government to unblock Twitter.
Separately,
Twitter has agreed to prevent some posts from being seen in Turkey,
though they remain viewable in the rest of the world. The government
also wants the company to open an office in Turkey, pay taxes on
advertising revenue and reveal the identities of people publishing the
leaks.
The company has not said whether it would turn over
information about users to the Turkish authorities. In the past, it has
refused to reveal user data in some cases; in other circumstances, it
has given up the information when ordered to do so by a court. According
to the company's semiannual transparency report, it received 1,410
requests for account information from various governments worldwide in
the last six months of 2013. The company produced at least some user
information in 50 percent of those cases. It received fewer than 10
requests from Turkey and 833 requests from the United States.
If
the Turkish government tries to compel Twitter to reveal the users'
identities, the company should certainly strongly resist what is clearly
a politically motivated action. Complying with such demands would aid
Mr. Erdogan's administration in its persecution of critics and political
opponents. The Committee to Protect Journalists reports that Turkey is
the "world's top press jailer" and imprisoned 40 journalists as of Dec. 1. Most have been held on terrorism or other anti-state charges, which are often used to silence and punish dissidents.
Saturday, April 19, 2014
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