Global Free Expression Stories
Russia fines Google for failing to remove news it calls ‘fake’
A Russian court fined Google about $360 million for failing to remove content the country deems illegal, including coverage of the war in Ukraine. The forbidden content includes clips encouraging Russian citizens to participate in protests and news Moscow considers “fake.” Four months ago, President Vladimir V. Putin signed a law effectively criminalizing any public opposition to the war as an attempt to silence critics while spotlighting pro-Kremlin media. Under this law, even the use of the word “war” is off limits.
THE NEW YORK TIMES
In Argentina, one of the world’s first bans on gender-neutral language
Last month, the city government in Buenos Aires banned teachers from using any gender-neutral words during class and in communications with parents. The city’s education minister said such language violated the rules of Spanish and stymied students’ reading comprehension. These word changes, which had been informally adopted by teachers in schools across Buenos Aires, were a deliberate effort to include people who don’t identify as male or female in a language where many words are categorized as either masculine or feminine.
THE NEW YORK TIMES
Russia's independent TV Rain channel back on air from abroad
TV Rain, Russia's last independent channel, is back on air, more than four months after being forced to close over its coverage of the war in Ukraine. Known as Dozhd in Russian, it resumed broadcasting from Latvia, streaming a news programme on its YouTube channel. Dozhd was blocked by Russia's authorities in early March - just days after Moscow had invaded Ukraine. Many employees then fled Russia, and later started work on rebuilding the channel abroad. Analysts say YouTube is likely to be the only way most people in Russia will be able to access the channel's output via virtual private networks (VPNs).
BBC
|