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      pubsub.blastersklan.com / slashdot · 6 days ago - 15:48 edit

    Pavel Durov, the founder of Telegram messaging app, has accused tech giants Google and Apple of threatening to censor content on smartphones [YouTube link]. In an interview with Tucker Carlson, Durov claimed that these companies told Telegram to comply with their guidelines or face removal from their app stores. "Those two platforms, they could basically censor everything you can read, access on your smart phone," Durov said. With 900 million active users, Telegram is expected to cross the one billion mark within a year.

    Read more of this story at Slashdot.

    Telegram Founder Accuses Google and Apple of Censorship Threat
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      apple.slashdot.org /story/24/04/17/1520201/telegram-founder-accuses-google-and-apple-of-censorship-threat

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      Chechnya bans dance music that is either too fast or too slow

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 9 April - 08:26

    Ruling means music in Russian republic must ‘conform to Chechen mentality and sense of rhythm’

    The Russian republic of Chechnya has banned dance music it deems either too fast or too slow, in an attempt to quash a “polluting” western influence on the conservative majority-Muslim region.

    Musa Dadayev, the culture minister, said “all musical, vocal and choreographic works should correspond to a tempo of 80-116 beats per minute” to make music “conform to the Chechen mentality and sense of rhythm”, according to the Russian news agency Tass.

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      Claims of TikTok whistleblower may not add up

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Saturday, 6 April - 10:40

    TikTok logo next to inverted US flag.

    Enlarge (credit: SOPA Images | LightRocket | Getty Images )

    The United States government is currently poised to outlaw TikTok . Little of the evidence that convinced Congress the app may be a national security threat has been shared publicly, in some cases because it remains classified . But one former TikTok employee turned whistleblower, who claims to have driven key news reporting and congressional concerns about the app, has now come forward.

    Zen Goziker worked at TikTok as a risk manager, a role that involved protecting the company from external security and reputational threats. In a wrongful termination lawsuit filed against TikTok's parent company ByteDance in January, he alleges he was fired in February 2022 for refusing “to sign off” on Project Texas, a $1.5 billion program that TikTok designed to assuage US government security concerns by storing American data on servers managed by Oracle.

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      What a teacher in hiding can tell us about our failure to tackle intolerance | Kenan Malik

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Sunday, 31 March - 08:00 · 1 minute

    A class about free speech was cynically exploited by activists to incite fury in a local community

    Three years ago, on 25 March 2021, a teacher from Batley Grammar School (BGS) in West Yorkshire was forced into hiding after a religious studies class he gave led to protests from Muslim parents and to death threats . Today, that incident has been largely forgotten. Except by the teacher. He can’t forget it because, extraordinarily, he and his family are still in hiding. Equally extraordinarily, little is said about this.

    The debate about the events at BGS, like many about Islam, blasphemy and offence, has been framed by two polarised arguments. Many on the reactionary right (and not just the reactionary right) view such confrontations as the unacceptable price of mass immigration and the inevitable product of a Muslim presence in western societies. Many liberals and radicals, on the other hand, think it morally wrong to cause offence, believing that for diverse societies to function, there is a need to self-censor so as not to disrespect different cultures and beliefs. Neither argument bears much scrutiny. The most comprehensive account of the events at BGS comes in a review published last week by Sara Khan , the government’s independent adviser on “social cohesion and resilience”. The lesson that sparked the controversy was designed, ironically, to explore issues of blasphemy and free speech, and of appropriate ways of responding to religious disagreements.

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      The Guardian view on Evan Gershkovich’s year behind bars: Moscow should free him now | Editorial

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 27 March - 18:38 · 1 minute

    The Wall Street Journal correspondent is not a spy. He is a journalist, and should be released immediately from his Russian jail

    Evan Gershkovich , a Wall Street Journal reporter, has spent nearly a year in a Moscow prison, awaiting trial for a crime he did not commit. Mr Gershkovich was arrested last March in the Urals city of Yekaterinburg and jailed on espionage charges. He is not a spy. He is a journalist, and should be released immediately. Hostage diplomacy lies behind his incarceration. As the US ambassador to Russia, Lynne Tracy , said, Mr Gershkovich’s case “is not about evidence, due process, or rule of law. It is about using American citizens as pawns to achieve political ends”.

    Vladimir Putin indicated in February that a prisoner exchange could lead to the release of Mr Gershkovich. There have been high-profile prisoner swaps in the past. In December 2022, Moscow traded a US basketball star convicted of a drugs offence in Russia for a Russian arms trafficker. But a journalist’s detention to secure the release of a Russian hitman would underscore Russia’s retreat into a Soviet past. In 1986 an American journalist, Nicholas Daniloff , was arrested and charged with espionage. He was let go after two weeks when the US released a Soviet diplomat accused of spying. Mr Gershkovich has been inside for nearly 12 months.

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      Alan Titchmarsh’s jeans blurred by North Korean TV censors

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 26 March - 09:04

    Footage of green-fingered BBC presenter obscured from waist down to hide ‘symbol of US imperialism’

    His calm demeanour and wholesome vocation have apparently endeared him to one of the most authoritarian regimes in the world. But there is something about Alan Titchmarsh that North Korea’s censors can’t quite forgive – his jeans.

    The green-fingered broadcaster and author of raunchy novels has been a fixture on state television since 2022, albeit with the addition of a blurred effect from the waist down.

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      Elon Musk’s improbable path to making X an “everything app”

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Monday, 25 March - 11:00

    Elon Musk’s improbable path to making X an “everything app”

    Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson | NurPhoto / Getty Images)

    X used to be called Twitter, but soon it will become "the Everything App," and that day is "closer than everyone thinks," X CEO Linda Yaccarino promised in one of her first X posts of 2024.

    "Nothing can slow us down," Yaccarino said.

    Turning Twitter into an everything app is arguably the reason that Elon Musk purchased Twitter. He openly craved the success of the Chinese everything app WeChat, telling Twitter staff soon after purchasing the app that "you basically live on WeChat in China because it’s so usable and helpful to daily life, and I think if we can achieve that, or even get close to that at Twitter, it would be an immense success,” The Guardian reported .

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      Users shocked to find Instagram limits political content by default

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 22 March - 17:50

    Users shocked to find Instagram limits political content by default

    Enlarge (credit: Instagram )

    Instagram users have started complaining on X (formerly Twitter) after discovering that Meta has begun limiting recommended political content by default.

    "Did [y'all] know Instagram was actively limiting the reach of political content like this?!" an X user named Olayemi Olurin wrote in an X post with more than 150,000 views as of this writing. "I had no idea 'til I saw this comment and I checked my settings and sho nuff political content was limited."

    "Instagram quietly introducing a 'political' content preference and turning on 'limit' by default is insane?" wrote another X user named Matt in a post with nearly 40,000 views.

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      Edward Bond obituary

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 5 March - 17:00

    One of the most important British dramatists of the 20th century who was unafraid of taking on the establishment over censorship

    The battle to remove censorship from the British stage was fought primarily at the Royal Court theatre in London during the mid-1960s. The plays of Edward Bond, one of the most important British dramatists of the 20th century, who has died aged 89, were an essential part of that story and that struggle.

    Bond had submitted plays to George Devine’s recently established English Stage Company at the Royal Court in 1958 and, as a result, was invited to join the theatre’s Writers’ Group. His first performed play, The Pope’s Wedding, was given in a production without decor on 9 December 1962, and Devine then commissioned a new play, which Bond submitted in September 1964.

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