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YouTube refuses to remove anti-Islamic film clip

Westwood

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset

YouTube refuses to remove anti-Islamic film clip


YouTube will not remove a film clip mocking the Islamic Prophet Mohammad that has been blamed for anti-US protests in Egypt and Libya, but it has blocked access to it in those countries.

cairo-protest_2338161b.jpg


Egyptian protesters burn a US flag during a demonstration against a film deemed offensive to Islam outside the US embassy in Cairo
Photo: KHALED DESOUKI/AFP/Getty Images

8:15AM BST 13 Sep 2012

The clip, based on a longer film, depicts the prophet as a fraud and philanderer and has been blamed for sparking violence at US embassies in Cairo and Benghazi. US Ambassador to Libya Christopher Stevens and three other American diplomats were killed by gunmen in an attack on the US Consulate in Benghazi on Tuesday.

Google's response to the crisis highlighted the struggle faced by the company, and others like it, to balance free speech with legal and ethical concerns in an age when social media can impact world events.

Analysts say they have seen a handful of internet companies generally take a more hands-off approach to controversial political speech, perhaps motivated by idealistic and business considerations.

In a brief statement on Wednesday, Google officials rejected the notion of removing the video on grounds it did not violate YouTube's policies, but restricted viewers in Egypt and Libya from loading it due to the special circumstances in the country.

"This video – which is widely available on the Web – is clearly within our guidelines and so will stay on YouTube," Google said in a statement. "However, given the very difficult situation in Libya and Egypt, we have temporarily restricted access in both countries."

The company added: "Our hearts are with the families of the people murdered in yesterday's attack in Libya."

The 14-minute clip is a trailer for a film called the "Innocence of Muslims," widely attributed to a man who described himself as a California-based Israeli Jew named Sam Bacile.

Under Google's procedures, YouTube users can flag objectionable content. It is reviewed by a team of Google staff scattered around the world. By late Thursday, a copy of the video had been viewed more than 122,000 times and had been flagged by users for removal, but it remained.

When videos come under review, YouTube weighs the content against " community guidelines, " which prohibit hate speech, including speech that attacks or demeans a group based on religion. "They've had a number of years to be thinking about free speech issues," Harvard law professor Jonathan Zittrain said.

"I can see them trying to keep an eye on the longer term and not wanting to go down the slippery slope of entertaining more and more demands to take things down. That can be corrosive in the longer haul."

Observers say Google has grown more averse to removing videos. After its 2006 acquisition of YouTube, it was accused of censorship in several high-profile controversies.

"They're squeezed on all sides," said Rebecca MacKinnon, a fellow at the New America Foundation. "But because of pressure from a lot of people who feel they made the wrong decisions, they now generally err on the side of keeping things up."

In recent years, Google has used technology to filter out videos in certain countries to comply with local regulations. Twitter announced a similar technology to censor tweets by country this year. Others say Google has not done enough and bears a responsibility to police hate- speech more closely.

In 2008, Senator Joe Lieberman of Connecticut accused Google of not doing enough to remove YouTube videos produced by Islamic militants. An Italian court in 2010 convicted four Google executives of invasion of privacy after faulting the company for not moving quickly enough to pull a video of an autistic child being bullied.

On Wednesday, Afghanistan's general director of information technology at the Ministry of Communications, Aimal Marjan, told Reuters: " We have been told to shut down YouTube to the Afghan public until the video is taken down."

YouTube did not respond to a request for comment on the Afghan government's move. Underscoring Google's quandary, some digital free expression groups have criticised YouTube for censoring the video.

Eva Galperin of the Electronic Frontier Foundation said given Google' s strong track record of protecting free speech, she was surprised the company gave in to pressure to selectively block in an attempt "to be seen as doing something in response to the violence."

"It is extremely unusual for YouTube to block a video in any country without it being a violation of their terms of service or in response to a valid legal complaint," Galperin said. " I'm not sure they did the right thing."

Zittrain said th e dilemmas facing YouTube will persist as the flow of online content continues to balloon.

"It's a more vibrant and chaotic speech marketplace than we've ever known," Zittrain said.

Source: agencies
 

Westwood

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset

Afghan government orders YouTube block

AAP September 14, 2012 1:56AM

THE Afghan government has ordered an indefinite ban on YouTube to prevent access to a film made in the United States that Kabul says is offensive to Muslims, officials say.

"We received an official letter from the ministry of communication and technology today asking us to block the YouTube website until further notice," said Massoud Khan Basharmal, of internet service provider Multinet.

An official from the communication ministry confirmed the decision.

However, it was still possible to access YouTube and watch the film in Kabul on Thursday.

"The government has ordered us to block the YouTube website indefinitely. The decision is intended to prevent access to this film about the Prophet Mohammed," said the ministry official.

"We have asked all the internet service providers registered with the ministry of communication to block access to YouTube."

On Wednesday, communication ministry official Aimal Marjan told AFP that the website had been "temporarily blocked" for almost 90 minutes.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai on Thursday postponed a visit to Norway fearing a violent backlash at home over the film that sparked riots that killed the US ambassador in Libya.

The assault, which left four American diplomats dead in the Libyan city of Benghazi, was triggered by a mob angered by the low-budget film Innocence of Muslims, which portrays Muslims as immoral and gratuitously violent.

Afghanistan has condemned it as "insulting".

Yemeni police on Thursday shot dead a protester and wounded five others when they opened fire on a crowd attempting to storm the US embassy in Sanaa.

Protests are expected to take place in Afghanistan after weekly prayers on Friday.

Afghanistan is a devout Muslim country where anything seen as insulting to Islam is taken very seriously, often with a violent response.

Riots killed around 40 people earlier this year after US troops burnt copies of the Koran on a military base.
 
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