Global Net freedom on the decline: Freedom House report
- Category
Polity & Governance
- Published
14th Oct, 2023
-
Context:
According to a new report by Freedom House, Global Internet freedom has declined for the 13th consecutive year.
About
Highlights of the Report:
- About: The report, titled ‘Freedom on the Net 2023: The Repressive Power of Artificial Intelligence’, has raised a red flag on the increasing use of artificial intelligence by governments for censorship and spread of disinformation.
- This is the 13th edition of an annual study of human rights online
- The report covers developments between June 2022 and May 2023.
- On a range of 1 to 100 where ‘100’ represented highest digital freedom and ‘1’ the worst repression.
- Key Points:
- Country-wise data: It evaluates Internet freedom in 70 countries, accounting for 88% of the world’s Internet users.
- The environment for human rights online has deteriorated in 29 countries, with only 20 countries registering net gains.
- Iceland scored 94, emerged as the country with the best climate of Internet freedom.
- India scored 50 remained at the middle ground.
- As per the report, the sharpest rise in digital repression was witnessed in Iran, where authorities shut down Internet service, blocked WhatsApp and Instagram, and increased surveillance in a bid to quell anti-government protests.
- China, for the ninth straight year, ranked as the world’s worst environment for Internet freedom.
- Also Myanmar found to be the world’s second most repressive for online freedom.
- People faced legal repercussions for expressing themselves online in a record 55 countries this year, and the number of countries where authorities carry out widespread arrests and impose multi-year prison terms for online activity has risen sharply over the past decade, from 18 in 2014 to 31 in 2023.
- The report also detailed how elections were a trigger for digital repression.
- The report evaluates countries on five censorship methods —
- Internet connectivity restrictions,
- blocks on social media platforms,
- blocks on websites,
- blocks on VPNs, and
- forced removal of content
- For India:
- Detailing AI-enabled digital repression in India: The Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules require large social media platforms to use AI-based moderation tools for broadly defined types of content — such as speech that could undermine public order, decency, morality, or the country’s sovereignty, integrity, and security, or content that officials had previously ordered removed.”
- Warning of adverse repercussions for Indian democracy: As the country prepares for general elections in 2024, the government’s expanding censorship regime is creating an uneven playing field by silencing criticism of and independent reporting on the ruling party.
- India also figured among the list of countries that blocked websites hosting political, social, or religious content, deliberately disrupted ICT networks, used pro-government commentators to manipulate online discussions, and conducted technical attacks against government critics or human rights organisations.
- India engaged in all types of censorship methods, except one (VPN blocking).