Open Minds! (formerly: Moving Images blog)

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    • 'Chief Seattle speech': Global environmental legend, or pervasive myth?
    • Remembering Asia’s Titanic: The Doña Paz tragedy that killed over 4,000 in Dec 1987
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    • සිවුමංසල කොලූගැටයා #45: තොරතුරු සමාජයේ මාධ්‍ය භාවිතය හා වාරණය
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    • Avoiding ‘Cyber Nanny State’: Challenges of Social Media Regulation in Sri Lanka
    • Dreaming of a Truly Civilised Society in Sri Lanka…where everyone’s dignity is ensured!
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[op-ed] No Internet Please, We’re Sri Lankan!

30 August 2016 — Nalaka Gunawardene
What would DS (Sri Lanka's first Prime Minister) do today? Cartoon by Dharshana Karunathilake

What would DS (Sri Lanka’s first Prime Minister) do today? Cartoon by Dharshana Karunathilake

No Internet Please, We’re Sri Lankan!

That’s the provocative headline given to my latest op-ed essay, just published by the leading citizen journalism portal Groundviews.org

Drawing from my recent interactions with the IGF Academy, as well as several academic and civil society groups, I position the current public debates on web’s socio-cultural impacts in the context of freedom of expression.

With 30 per cent of our population now using the Internet, it is no longer a peripheral pursuit. Neither is it limited to cities or rich people. So we urgently need more accurate insights into how society and economy are being transformed by these modern tools.

My basic premise: many well-meaning persons who urge for greater regulation of the web and social media overlook that governments in Sri Lanka have a terrible track record in stifling dissent in the name of safeguarding the public.

Cartoon by John Jonik

Cartoon by John Jonik

I argue: “As a democracy recovering from a decade of authoritarianism, we need to be especially careful how public sentiments based on fear or populism can push policymakers to restrict freedom of expression online. The web has become the last frontier for free speech when it is under pressure elsewhere.

“When our politicians look up to academics and researchers for policy guidance, the advice they often get is control or block these new media. Instead, what we need is more study, deeper reflection and – after that, if really required – some light-touch regulation.”

I acknowledge that there indeed are problems arising from these new technologies – some predictable, and others not. They include cyber-bullying, hate speech, identity theft through account hijacking, trolling (deliberately offensive or provocative online postings) and sexting (sending and receiving sexually explicit messages, primarily via mobile phones).

I cite some research findings from the work done by non-profit groups or media activists. These findings are not pretty, and some of them outright damning. But bans, blocks and penalties alone cannot deal with these or other abuses, I argue.

I end with these words: “We can and must shape the new cyber frontier to be safer and more inclusive. But a safer web experience would lose its meaning if the heavy hand of government or social orthodoxy tries to make it a sanitized, lame or sycophantic environment at the same time. We sure don’t need a cyber nanny state.”

Read full essay here: http://groundviews.org/2016/08/29/no-internet-please-were-sri-lankan/

Yours comments are always welcome to enrich this conversation!

Cartoon by Ben Garrison

Cartoon by Ben Garrison

Posted in community media, Democracy, Digital Divide, digital media, Digital Natives, Global South, good governance, Human rights, ICT, Information Society, Internet, Journalism, Media, Media activism, Media freedom, New media, public interest, right to information, social media, Sri Lanka, Writing, youth, YouTube. Tags: account hijacking, cyber security, cyber-bullying, freedom of expression, hate speech, identity theft, Internet, Internet freedom, Internet governance, Mobile phones, nanny cyber state, online freedom of expression, safe and open Internet, safe web browsing, sexting, Social Media, Sri Lanka censorship, trolling, web censorship. 1 Comment »
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