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YouTube and TikTok put human rights in jeopardy in Turkey - EFF

Jan 10 2021 01:19 Gmt+3 Last Updated On: Jan 11 2021 08:51 Gmt+3 Social media companies such as YouTube and TikTok should not give into a recent Turkish law which imposes tighter controls on their platforms, said the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), a civil and digital rights nonprofit organisation. The statement comes after Tiktok, a Chinese video-sharing social network, announced on Friday it would set up a legal entity in Turkey to serve as a local representative to comply with the new social media law Turkish parliament ratified in July. YouTube made a similar announcement in December. The bill stipulates that social media giants like Facebook, Twitter and Instagram must appoint a legal representative in Turkey to whom courts can turn to make requests to remove content or provide the identity of users.

YouTube and TikTok Put Human Rights In Jeopardy in Turkey

Democracy in Turkey is in a deep crisis. Its ruling party, led by Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, systematically silences marginalized voices, shuts down dissident TV channels, sentences journalists, and disregards the European Court of Human Rights decisions. As we wrote in November, in this oppressive.

Viral year 2020: Turkey makes mark at home and abroad

April 2 - 555 Turkish citizens from Algeria evacuated by Algerian Airlines to Samsun in Turkey s Black Sea region. April 6 - Turkey s flagship Anadolu Agency celebrates its centennial, as it was founded on April 6, 1920 – 17 days before the Turkish Grand National Assembly convened for the first time on April 23, amid the Turkish War of Independence. Since its foundation, Anadolu Agency has worked to speedily disseminate factual news across the globe with confidence, impartiality, and professionalism. It is seen as one of the world s most prestigious news agencies, currently producing news in 13 languages and serving 6,000 subscribers in 93 countries with at least 3,000 employees stationed in 100 countries.

Turkey Slaps Social Media Platforms $3 8M Fines

Turkey Slaps Social Media Platforms $3.8M Fines Several firms, such as Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, continue to fail to appoint local representative. Turkey s Information and Communication Technologies Authority (BTK) on Friday slapped multiple social media giants with a penalty of 30 million Turkish liras ($3.8 million) each for their continued failure to hire local representatives. As required by recent legislation, the fine was applied to platforms that are accessed over 1 million times per day in Turkey, including Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Periscope, Linkedin, Dailymotion and TikTok, sources told Anadolu Agency. A new social media law came into effect as of Oct. 1. After the first 30-day period to appoint their local representatives, authorities had fined social media platforms 10 million Turkish liras (around $1.2 million).

Turkey fines social media platforms for not opening an office in the country

Turkey fines social media platforms for not opening an office in the country
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