The Turkish government has doubled down on its Internet censorship program,
blocking all of Youtube in addition to its
ban on Twitter. Despite theories about the
political theatre of blocking Twitter,
it seems like Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is also genuinely
concerned with suppressing a recording of a conversation with his son in
which he conspires to hide the money he is thought to have received
through corrupt dealing. As with the Twitter block, this one was
undertaken as an administrative order from the PM's office, without
judicial oversight. The Twitter ban has since been rescinded by the
Turkish courts, but the block may not be lifted before the elections.
There is still no official announcement by TİB, the government authority
in charge of internet regulation and the organ who implements blocking
decisions. However, YouTube’s URL and title appeared on BTK’s (higher
organ that includes TİB) web page where the blocked URLs are listed.
The site is still accessible through some ISPs, but the blocking is
expected to be implemented fully in an hour’s time by all ISPs.
The government banned Twitter last week on the grounds that the company
fails to remove ‘illegal’ content according to Turkish authorities.
Yesterday, an administrative court ruled for the suspension of the
execution of Twitter blocking.
Last week, Google Inc. has announced that it declined the requests
coming from the Turkish government in recent weeks to remove YouTube
videos revealing extensive corruption involving PM, his family,
ministers, businessmen and several government officials, the Wall Street
Journal reported.
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