U.S. GOVERNMENT ASKS GOOGLE TO REMOVE ALMOST 4,000 POLITICAL ITEMS FROM SEARCH
2 days ago | US | Posted by Sonya SandageReports came out yesterday in the UK covering Google’s newest release of their “Transparency Report.” Turkey has been known for it’s total lack of press freedom, and now reports show the U.S. is approaching the same leagues as Turkey.
http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2013/04/transparency-report-more-government.html
The report was presented on the blog of Susan Infantino, the Legal Director of Google. She and her legal team launched the annual Transparency Report three years ago, in hopes it would “shine light on the scale and scope of government requests for censorship and data around the globe.”
From January to June 2013, the search giant received 3,846 government requests to remove content from its search services, which represents a 68% increase over the second half of 2012.
http://www.google.com/transparencyreport/removals/government/?hl=en
“These officials often cite defamation, privacy, and even copyright laws in attempts to remove political speech from our services,” says Infantino.
One example is a request from a UK law firm representing a former member of Parliament to remove a preview from Google Books that allegedly defamed the MP by suggesting he was engaged in illegal activity. The preview was removed.
“We have removed content in response to less than one third of requests,” Infantino adds.
From January to June 2013, the following countries made the most requests to remove content:
- Turkey (1,673 requests detailing 12,162 items)
- United States (545 requests detailing 3,887 items)
- Brazil (321 requests detailing 1,635 items)
- India (163 requests detailing 714 items)
- Russia (257 requests detailing 277 items)
- UK (117 requests for 556 items)
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Sonya Sandage
Sonya Sandage is a financial industry
professional, and has worked for the nation's largest banks and
investment wirehouses for 12 years as Private Wealth Manager.
Originally from Florida, and a graduate of UF, she now resides in
Washington, DC. Her goal is to get more Americans interested and
engaged in their nation's governance.
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