Business 100 – Twitter ‘stood up’ to Trump but was ‘bullied’ in India, says a journalist who was caught up in the platform’s standoff with Modi

  • 投稿カテゴリー:Business

Protests India farmers February 18

Farmers throw flower petals while blocking a railway track to stop train services at Modi Nagar railway station as part of protests against farm laws, in Modinagar, Uttar Pradesh, India, February 18, REUTERS/Anushree Fadnavis

Warm up

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  1. What industry do you work in and what is your role?
  2. What are your responses in your role / position?
  3. Can you describe to the function of your workplace / company?
  4. How many departments, how many offices. National or International?
  5. What are the minimum requirements for employment ie Education or Experience?
  6. How many opportunities are there to ‘move up the ladder’?
  7. What is the process for changing job roles ie Interview? Test?

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General discussion about your workweek:

  1. Current projects? Deadlines? Opportunities?
  2. Anything of interest happening?

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Script

  • Twitter said it would defend “freedom of expression” as Indian authorities requested bans. 
  • But activists and journalists were subject to temporary bans and limitations of their accounts.
  • One said Twitter “could stand up to the president of their country but were getting bullied here.”
  • Visit the Business section of Insider for more stories.

1. Twitter is in a predicament in India. It is caught between the demands of an increasingly authoritarian government of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and a global outcryspurred by tweets from singer Rihanna and climate activist Greta Thunberg – to protect the tens of thousands of farmers who have gathered in Delhi to protest new agricultural laws.

2. As it wrestles with what to do under intense scrutiny, journalists and activists have been among those caught up in the standoffThe Caravan, a prestigious magazine that publishes confrontational, longform journalism reflects its predicament.  Just one week after Twitter censored the Caravan’s accounts at the Indian Government’s request, the magazine received a prestigious award from Harvard University’s Nieman Foundation, that praised its “unique and uncompromising coverage of the erosion of human rights, social justice, and democracy.”

3. The standoff grew as worldwide interest intensifiedTwitter issued a statement on February 10 saying it had banned those who violated its rules but only “temporarily complied” with the Indian Government’s specific requests for bans, later restoring those accounts. It added it restricted some accounts but only within India. “In keeping with our principles of defending protected speech and freedom of expression, we have not taken any action on accounts that consist of news media entities, journalists, activists, and politicians,” Twitter said.

4. Caravan’s executive editor Vinod Jose told Insider that the block, which stopped people in India accessing its Hindi and English language accounts, felt “targeted” as the publication has aggressively criticized the government. But he said he was surprised that Twitter had briefly complied given it had permanently deleted Donald Trump’s account for inciting the Capitol Hill riots three weeks earlier.

Vinod Jose

Vinod Jose Shahid Tantray

5. “My first thought was they could stand up to the president of their country but were getting bullied here,” he added. He added the ban helped generate publicity for the magazine, which has since launched a subscription drive fronted by Man Booker Prize-winning novelist Arundhati Roy. As well as requesting Twitter bans, the Indian authorities have also moved against prominent voices because of their tweets.

6. On January 30, Jose and six other journalists, including top news anchor Rajdeep Sardesai, had complaints filed against them accusing them of criminal sedition for tweeting about the alleged fatal shooting of a protestor, whose death was later revealed to have been an accident. The charge can carry a sentence of life imprisonment. Their arrests were subsequently stayed by the top court on February 9. 

7. This was not an isolated incident. A freelance journalist spent a month in jail last year over a tweet that authorities said had disrupted communal harmony. On February 15, police charged a 22-year-old climate activist with sedition for circulating a toolkit that Thunberg had tweeted. Inji Pennu, a Kerala-born tech blogger who lives in Florida and monitors social media trends in India, told Insider it would be a “privilege” for anyone to “post on a social media platform and escape without having a complaint slapped against you.”

8. Political commentator Sanjukta Basu also had her Twitter targeted on February 1, when she woke up to see her account was invisible inside India. She told Insider she initially thought a tweet about the arrest of a stand up comic must have prompted it.  But she deduced from media reports that her account was blocked because she had used the hashtag #ModiPlanningFarmerGenocide, that spread the false claim Modi was planning mass murder.

9. Basu told Insider her tweet didn’t endorse the claim but was “examining Twitter’s illogical trends and had listed some trending hashtags.” She believed her vocal criticism of Modi’s government had prompted the ban. After her account was restored, she tweeted about the surge in followers she had, saying: “More they bully you, more you grow.”

10. Asked how the episode left her feeling about Twitter, she said: “They stood up to the Indian government because of a regime change in the US. It doesn’t want to be seen siding with an authoritarian government in a developing country.” Raheel Khursheed, a journalist who was head of news, politics and government at Twitter India And South East Asia from 2014 to 2018, agreed Joe Biden replacing Donald Trump meant there was now a US President who was “ideologically more aligned with Twitter’s position on free speech”.

11. “I politely remind the companies, whether it is Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn or WhatsApp or anyone, they are free to work in India, do business, but they need to respect the Indian Constitution.” Twitter reportedly met with Indian Government officials earlier this month and had taken down 97% of the accounts authorities had requested. The Indian Express reported it told authorities it would restructure its India team so there were more senior managers in the country to handle compliance issues. Khursheed said it was an “interesting moment in Twitter’s journey in India”. 

Discussion

1. Do you think the policies of a social media company should change from country to country?

2. Are there any particular laws regarding social media in Japan?

3. Who are the most notable / popular political critics on social media in Japan?

4. What have been the biggest industry related protests in japan?

 

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