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Turkey imposes advertising bans on Twitter, Periscope and Pinterest (reuters.com)
110 points by giuliomagnifico on Jan 19, 2021 | hide | past | favorite | 133 comments



After all that happened, Now it makes sense for a country to have a grasp over the communication of its citizens.

That’s said, the primary use is expected to be control of journalism on Youtube.

After Erdogan took over almost all of the media, many of the fired journalists started Youtube channels and got more popular than the media Erdogan has a hold on.

He now wants to impose the same controls that he has over TV channels. The body responsible is called RTUK and recently got regulatory powers over internet broadcasting too. It infamously fines TV channels that are not friendly enough to Erdogan at the smallest mistake and turning blind eye on pro-Erdogan channels. This is because, the fines need to go through the committee in which Erdogan holds the majority.

To what extent you might ask? Well, there’s a talk show host on the TV who got destroyed for having a guest who said “let’s save the kids” when talking about governments dealings with the Kurds and there’s a TV channel who got a slap on the wrist after a public outcry for hosting commentators asking people to keep arms at home and identify potential targets among their neighbours who might be Erdogan’s political rivals.

The double standards are off the charts. Youtube is probably becoming Erdogan’s double standards enforcer.Everything is going to be legal, of course.

If youtube doesn’t behave, more fines will come. The government would usually turn a blind eye to some practices in the industry and will slap fines to those who are not in line. Turkey has strong as GDPR personal information protection laws, probably a land mine field for ad-agencies and that’s how they will get their fines I would guess.


It should be noted that the US has the same double standards, but enforced by silicon valley corps themselves in union.

Moral of the story: Power currupts.


It's not the same thing. As long as you don't cause violence or you're not violating the terms of service which you accepted while joining to the service, they wouldn't remove your content or block you. Of course, you can come up with one off examples of ML models screwing things up but it's not the intention while developing those models.

Turkish government's intention here is getting content that criticise them removed, by asking to representative in Turkey who by the way must be a Turkish citizen, not just a person from any nationality who can speak Turkish. So that, they can apply Turkish law to this person if they would like to. If Youtube doesn't remove the content, possibly as they did with TV they are going to fine them.

I don't see this model working for long time and expecting most of the companies to pull their representatives soon, if they open the door of every country getting content removed however they like, I'm sure there will be other countries who would want that and it would be terrible for freedom of speech.


> As long as you don't cause violence or you're not violating the terms of service which you accepted while joining to the service, they wouldn't remove your content or block you.

If I remember correctly, a lot of violence and multiple revolutions happened with the help of Twitter and YouTube all over the world. As long as violence is not in the US, it does not count, I suppose. That was probably what GP meant by saying "double standards".


There is both good violence and bad violence. Blanket rules don't exist, despite our wish they did.


Bad violence is against me and people I like, good violence is against people who I don't like — am I right?


It’s funny how these arguments always go the same way. X Group is horrible because they did Y action, but if I do Y action it’s fine, because I’m with the good guys.


The alternative, that all oppressed people just have to accept their oppression is even more intolerable, IMO.


I would agree with this. Various world leaders did 10x of what Trump did on Twitter, but since it wasn’t in the US no actions were taken.


At least Google has openly admitted to censoring political content of various political perspectives.

https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2020/11/04/goog-n04.html


>As long as you don't cause violence or you're not violating the terms of service which you accepted while joining to the service, they wouldn't remove your content or block you.

That's both optimistic and naive given that TOS can change at any time, and interpretation aren't subject to appeal with a transparent process.


Yes, it can change any time and you can follow what's changed. It's also open to appeal to the company and I have seen mistakes corrected.

My point is there is no secret agenda to bring up a content that supports one view. What Turkish gov wants to achieve is that, taking down the content they don't like. They have taken over all mainstream TV channels and you wouldn't see a line of critic on any channel, if you do it's quite likely you will not be invited to debate next time.


clearly you never watch TV in turkey. there are critics everyday on very political TV programmes. and usually they try to get a representative from each political party to make it as fair as possible. except HDP, which has substential ties with terror organisations and very bad reputation in turkey. west think there is blockade against anti-government political fractions but in reality there is blockade against western puppets. that's drives western countries crazy due to not have any soft power on turkey.


It's also the American conception of free speech, which culturally differs from most countries. In the US, if a private company censors arbitrarily, it's still freedom of speech because you're still allowed to build your own competing business, and anyway it's your fault for agreeing to the legal terms and conditions. Even if it's a monopoly, Americans view freedom as something only governments remove.


Terms of service cannot supersede local laws. If Twitter wants to do business in a country, they need to comply. Twitter can choose to give up ad revenue and reach. Turkish government may have bad motive. However, democratic governments around the world can and should regulate social media in their countries per the local laws.


So, all social media companies must have representative in all countries that allow local govs to remove any content? Or get all of their info such as IP address?

Where is the line here? If I live in US and Tweet in Turkish, if Turkish gov ask for removal of that content should it be removed? Or should companies be required to share information about this user?

If I write that in another language, that local gov don't like, does it give Turkish gov right to get that removed?


> So, all social media companies must have representative in all countries that allow local govs to remove any content? Or get all of their info such as IP address?

Maybe. How a global communication network should interact with local laws and customs is in many aspects still an open problem that we just have begun to tackle.

> If I live in US and Tweet in Turkish, if Turkish gov ask for removal of that content should it be removed? Or should companies be required to share information about this user?

Welcome in a globalized world. I hope this won't be the eventual outcome, but this is definitly not a trivial question to answer. This stuff is why we have international organisations like the UN etc.


For Turkey, the limit is 1M daily users from Turkey.

If you are beyond this limit, you are required to have a representative or the bandwidth limitations are applied and fines start to accumulate. If you don’t intend to do business in Turkey, you just go on with your business and loose that market.

Oh, btw, it’s likely that they will request global content removal. If I recall correctly Youtube or Wikipedia was blocked for years because of this.


That's how it works in most other trades. They can go to WTO if they find it against its policies.


what if I live in Gaza and tweet in english badmouth about jews?

won't twitter censor my tweets for hate speech,?

github and gitlab are US companies and censored projects only for the owner being iranian


> ... or you're not violating the terms of service which you accepted while joining to the service, they wouldn't remove your content or block you.

Note that tech companies can change the terms of service at arbitrary points in time after you joined the service. You're of course free to reject the updated terms of service, in which case they will - wait for it - block you.


Why was AMREN banned from youtube then?


> ... Of course, you can come up with one off examples of ML models screwing things up but it's not the intention while developing those models.

The part with "in union" is not really explained by ML models. These de-platforming actions are done manually and apparently one-sided.

Just for fun you can look up why Trump was banned on Twitter and see Khamenei's worst tweets from months prior, that were still up a week ago or so (nevermind him being banned). You find tons of those examples.

Also the TOS does not matter.


Most of the time it might not be not just what you write but what that means in the context and which actions it triggers.


That kicks you off platforms you barely use? It's manually done. Don't hide behind "the machine did it"; it doesn't make sense.


I didn't say machines banned trump, I said evaluation of his tweets was in a context, not just what's written.


Just wanna point out, that he was not only banned on Twitter. It didn't make sense there, but on Youtube, Twitch, Shopify etc, it's just stupid and not covered by any of your excuses.


I read Twitter's reasoning for banning Trump. Basically they banned him for tweets:

“The 75,000,000 great American Patriots who voted for me, AMERICA FIRST, and MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN, will have a GIANT VOICE long into the future. They will not be disrespected or treated unfairly in any way, shape or form!!!”

“To all of those who have asked, I will not be going to the Inauguration on January 20th.”

I don't see any violence in those tweets and I don't understand what kind of person could classify those tweets as a violent ones. I guess only kind of person who wanted to ban him for anything.


Yeah, it just doesn't make sense. When I blatantly ignore all of his tweets claiming Biden lost, he won the election and that massive election fraud took place, I just can't understand why they would ban him!


There is a big difference between governments, the people that are in theory employed by the people, silence individuals, compared to some company not wanting individuals' speech on their platform.

If a company banned me from saying x, I can in theory go to another platform and say the same thing. Failing that, I can build my own site. There are a handful of things I can do to say x. Failing a digital platform, I can always go out on the street and say it. The police won't stop me.

If a government does the same, they have the power to prevent me from saying such a thing on all platforms, but worse, I can't even go out on the streets to say it, because I can get arrested. I could face maximum prison times, or worse, in some countries I could face the death penalty.

There is a huge difference.


We just witnessed that you actually cant do any of those things (build your own platform that has real reach), there is no free market. And now with where we are, what difference does it actually make when you think about it? In both scenarios its a handful of people dictating the speech of billions, on the private side they’re not even elected.

The ideal scenario is that there is a free market of social media who can do whatever moderation they want. But we witnessed a serious blow to the idea thats even possible recently.


>We just witnessed that you actually cant do any of those things (build your own platform that has real reach), there is no free market.

I am witnessing the reality that it’s never been easier and cheaper in the history of the world to reach almost everyone in the world within seconds.

It’s extremely easy to build a website, host it, have people type in a few letters and numbers, and “reach” each other. It’s never been easier, or cheaper. It’s as free market as it gets.

Insufficient amount of people may be interested in that, but that has nothing to do with the mechanisms in place that can allow you to reach people, which don’t need to include Amazon, Google, or any other host.


> I am witnessing the reality that it’s never been easier and cheaper in the history of the world to reach almost everyone in the world within seconds.

Only as long you don't have the wrong opinion.

> It’s extremely easy to build a website, host it, have people type in a few letters and numbers, and “reach” each other. It’s never been easier, or cheaper. It’s as free market as it gets.

And where do you find it? Google? Also the witch-hunt doesn't stop there. Next up is the hosting (looking at Parler). I can't wait to see when registrars are next and you have to type in a dynamic IP given by the ISP. But everyone could reach you, they just have to know the IP. If that really would be viable ISP would be the next logical step in the witch-hunt.


> Only as long you don't have the wrong opinion.

With "wrong opinion" do you mean inciting hatred and violence, and spreading misinformation?

Because by that logic, we should also allow ISIS, Al-Qaeda et al. to do their thing.

Outside of these "wrong" opinions, parent commenter is pretty accurate. I've seen and heard of people launching a website in less than a day.

Let's not forget that freedom of speech does not give you freedom from consequences. AWS, Twitter, Google, Apple and everyone else has no obligation to give you a platform, especially when it looks bad on them, or it goes against their ahem morals (or rather: the employee's morals). Just like I, as an equal citizen, have no reason to hear you out or to spread your message, if I don't like your message.


> With "wrong opinion" do you mean inciting hatred and violence, and spreading misinformation?

Hey, how about you show me where Parler incited violence or where Trump did that. I don't care about buzzwords like misinformation or hatred - Twitter cares neither - but I do care about inciting violence.

In exchange I show you tweets from Khamanei - ayatollah of Iran.

> Because by that logic, we should also allow ISIS, Al-Qaeda et al. to do their thing.

ISIS/Al-Qaeda/Al-Nusra/Taliban whatever are terrorist groups; they don't only incite violence. Also putting misinformation and hatred in the same category as actual terror groups is really not wise.


> I am witnessing the reality that it’s never been easier and cheaper in the history of the world to reach almost everyone in the world within seconds.

Then please go ahead and build a website, make a statement on it and have, say, some 2 billion people read the statement.

That's just a fraction of the world's population, so it shouldn't be too hard. I'll wait.


2 billion people being able to read the statement is different than having 2 billion people read it. Nobody owes you the audience.

Bht the fact is, never in history has it been easier and cheaper to be ABLE to reach 2 billion people.

You don’t need thousands of employees, printing presses, lawyers and companies in multiple countries. You don’t even need to know different language. A single person has the ability to sit at their desk and make their ideas available to everyone that has access to the internet.


Im sorry to say this is a very naive view.


Yes, the original idea of free speech was much closer to building a printing press and distributing leaflets than access to other people’s platforms. The only place where that overlaps is broadcast TV due to bandwidth limitations.

IMO, forcing platforms to host content they disagree with is a free speech issue in the other direction.


> IMO, forcing platforms to host content they disagree with is a free speech issue in the other direction.

How do you figure? I don't know a person who believes that Twitter endorses all content that is found on Twitter. How is it a speech issue in the other direction when Twitter is not saying anything?

Further, about broadcast media, the US still has the equal time rule [0] and used to have a fairness doctrine which required broadcasters to present both sides of a debate [1]. It's worth mentioning that when the FCC (all Reagan appointees) removed the fairness doctrine, Congress acted to enshrine it in law and it was vetoed by Regan.

[0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equal-time_rule [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FCC_fairness_doctrine


> How is it a free speech issue in the other direction when Twitter is not saying anything?

Banning someone or something is them saying something. Endorsement of the debate between different political views doesn’t mean allowing every idea to be acceptable. Letting say the anti vaccination people on your site directly means more disease risk to the general population. However, realizing that doesn’t require you to act. You might decide that’s acceptable where allowing say militant groups planning an insurrection aren’t.

In other words, voluntarily not saying something doesn’t give up your right to free speech.


> Moral of the story: Power currupts.

I am not so certain of this any more. I believe that power shows those that are corrupt; the problem is that the set of corrupt men, and the set of those who wish for power, is virtually the same set.

There have very much been incorruptible men in history who were given great power, but in all cases that I know they did not seek it out, but rather were forced into it.


exactly

each nations (and/or state) has their own ethics that think it must be enforced

americans would think a state that jail for blasphemy a tyranny, while america itself jail for antisemitism, racism (and this one really depends!) and terrorism propaganda, while america backed fighters in foreign countries can be entitled (rebels) instead if terrorists only if they are "US-certified terrorists" and because american media can shout louder.


Strong discretion + misaligned incentives + distance or insulation from consequences always breeds extreme corruption like SF/Cali/Congress.

For social media, I don't see how this can be solves without federation of 3rd party moderation/filtering of some sort. We should let the users decide who should filter their content.


Silicon Valley cannot ban someone from the Internet, this is blatantly false.

And no, a ban from Twitter does not prevent a person from expressing themselves on the Internet, even if it changes how one attracts an audience. The Internet does not exist independent of physical space -- if you want to get a message out, you absolutely can, even if all of Silicon Valley tries to stop you.

This is lazy thinking, and I'm honestly getting tired of reading it, so please forgive my frustration.


When your host, domain registrar, payment processor, credit card company, and every social media channel decides to ban you, it is more or less equal to being banned from the Internet.

We have a term for this already: the chilling effect.


No it isn't, that is simply not true. There are more hosting providers, ISPs, payment processors, et al. than there are stars in the sky.

Stop lying, you know better.


It’s akin to having your restaurant banned from being within city limits. Sure, you can still set up a stall in the desert outside the city walls - no one is stopping you. But when 99.99% of the population is in the city center, is this a meaningful distinction?


Again, you know this analogy is wrong because it implies a relevance to proximity that doesn't exist on the Internet, and yet you continue to put it forward.

You are being either disingenuous or fundamentally misunderstand what a right to speech is (namely, it is not a right to be heard, only a right to speak freely).

Additionally, you are forgetting that the Internet does not exist independent of physical reality. There are plenty of ways to get attention in physical reality that directly translate to traffic to your voice on the Internet.


Proximity on the Internet absolutely matters. If you are banned from social media and your page is on the 1000th page of google results, you have no proximity to centers of attention.

And just a tip - leave out the “you know you’re wrong, you know you’re lying” comments. They’re unnecessary, condescending, and don’t help your argument.


I'm angry that people like you continue to willfully misrepresent how the Internet works, and I'm having a hard time controlling that anger. I'm sorry about that.

Proximity on the Internet matters if you're trying to start the next Twitter. It does not matter if you're trying to exercise your right to freely speak. There are plenty of ways in which you can make your voice very vocally heard that don't involve the Internet at all.

To put it another way, you don't have to advertise an Internet location exclusively on the Internet. In fact, you have no right to advertisement or audience on the Internet at all.


It isn’t anyone else’s problem that you can’t control your anger.

Yes, clearly places like Speaker’s Corner exist in real life. That is not up for debate. The issue is that an extremely small amount of American corporations are allowed to decide what is deemed acceptable to discuss online. If deemed unacceptable, you are relegated to the outskirts and often denied access to say, credit. (This has actually happened.) Do you not see the issue with this?

It’s precisely like my city center example. Yes, in literal terms you are free to start your restaurant outside the city. No one is preventing you. In practical, real life terms that actually affect real culture, it absolutely matters. Especially when you decide to exile so many people outside the city that they become radicalized and start attacking you. Creating more echo chambers doesn’t help anyone.


"The issue is that an extremely small amount of American corporations are allowed to decide what is deemed acceptable to discuss online."

This is simply not true. This is not what's happening, and again I am trying to understand a reason why you think this is the case.

"If deemed unacceptable, you are relegated to the outskirts and often denied access to say, credit."

I'm sorry again, but this is also not only untrue, but betrays a fundamental misunderstanding of how the Internet works. Any Internet accessible website is accessible from any browser at any time from anywhere in the world (excepting actual censorship taking place in some countries, e.g. the Great Firewall of China). This is what your "freedom of expression" guarantees, not access to the popular pages on the Internet.

The city center example is completely wrong because it imposes a false difficulty at visiting a restaurant outside of the city center that the restaurant cannot overcome. This is precisely the opposite of true, since any browser in the world can visit any Internet accessible website with the same level of effort. Your restaurant can still be walked into at an instant, anywhere in the world. Accessibility is a fixed value, and it's nearly zero.

Discovery of your speech is not a human right, however. I'm sorry if that violates your expectations, but it's true. You aren't guaranteed a right to be heard, only a right to speak, and on the Internet you will always have that right, again due to how the Internet works. It's a global network of interconnected computers, there will always be a place to express your thoughts and provide them to the world, one URL away.

I'm trying to give this more thought as our argument gets longer, as per HN guidelines, but I'm having a hard time keeping that goal clear. I would appreciate it if you tried to meet me somewhere in the middle here, to try and understand why I'm explaining things the way that I am.


Yes, you are not wrong that the Internet is a network of computers and that it is essentially impossible to “kick someone off” if they are technical enough.

That isn’t the point. The point is that free speech is both law and culture. Clinging to the notions of what is “legal free speech” is ignoring the cultural consequences of restricting it. Society is not a computer program that runs on laws.

When Amazon, Facebook, Twitter, Google, and Apple all decide that you shall not be heard, you’re locked out from the 99.99% of the population that has zero understanding of how to access things via the URL bar. Remember that a huge portion of people just type in “Facebook” on Google and click the first link. Facebook itself is “the Internet” to billions of people. The percentage of people that are capable of setting up their own server and website is quite small.

Maybe this seems academic to Americans, but these same social media companies actively encouraged the uprisings in the Middle East a decade ago. Do you understand that if they had instead said, “Nah, we are banning this”, political opposition would have been essentially impossible, because the average person can use Facebook and Twitter but sure as hell isn't going to type in some obscure URL and organize a protest that way.

This is not about the letter of the law or how the internet works. It’s about democratizing technology so that the people have a fighting chance against those with power.


> When Amazon, Facebook, Twitter, Google, and Apple all decide that you shall not be heard, you’re locked out from the 99.99% of the population

Yeah, I know, it's like Rep. Devin Nunes (R-CA) recently said on Fox News: Republicans literally have no way to get messages out now.

Except...


It is objectively false to say you are locked out of 99.9% of the population if Twitter, Amazon, and Google remove you from their platforms, and I think the fact that you believe such to be the case so unwaveringly means this conversation has come to an end.


After everything I wrote, this is your only response? Why do I even bother, honestly.

If the top 5 companies that dominate the Internet and technology ban you, yes, that locks you off from the overwhelming majority of the population.

That wasn’t even my point, which you seemed to either not understand or not care about. Nonetheless, yes, the conversation is over.


Don't derail the thread.


I'd say more like: power matters, words on paper not so much.


"After all that happened, Now it makes sense for a country to have a grasp over the communication of its citizens."

Wow. Fear ushers in tyranny, for sure.


> for a country to have a grasp over the communication of its citizens

It's never the country that has this power. It's particular government bodies.


In Turkey AKP/Erdogan is the "country". The beef between twitter and Erdogan's AKP is quite old and goes back to at least the times of the coup, and then when the Turkish police got doxxed by CthulhuSec.

edit: tone down my own opinion bc toyg is right in their critique


Yeah Turkey would be better off being ruled by an Islamist cult /s. Thanks for providing me with new perspectives HN


> times of the coup (which is a shame it failed),

Please take this as a honest suggestion, without any criticism meant: it's easier to persuade people if you limit the display of bias. By simply rewording that as "times of the attempted coup," you remain an objective observer and carry more authority from the reader's perspective.

This said, I know it's difficult and that things are tough when it comes to Turkey. Hopefully things will get better at some point, nobody lives forever.


[flagged]


This has been a bit of a problem in the West of backing "rebels" indiscriminately without checking if their politics is actually worse than the politics of those they're rebelling against.


> quite a lot of Kurds will beg to differ?

Huh? Which Kurds? Istanbul Kurds? Black Sea Kurds? Eastern border Kurds? South-Eastern mountain Kurds? My neighborhood in Beşiktaş is 30% Kurd, and 70% of the neighborhood voted HDP (the Kurdish party), including my atheist, liberal family of scientists and engineers.

Kurds hate Tayipp too. That's why the HDP won 13% of the vote which finally gave them parliamentary representation in 2015, then again maintained the in the post-coup election.

I know Kurds in my neighborhood who RAN down to the bridge to fight the Gulenist tank drivers with their fists. They stood in the streets and screamed at the F-16s flying over the city all night long, and they throw rocks and shot at the black helicopter which hovered over Fulya looking for a place to land. When they realized the helicopter was going to try and land at the BJK youth football field in Dikilitaş, no less than 50 of them went to that field and started shooting at the helicopter, which eventually went down and landed in Besiktas stadium.

This isn't a Hollywood movie. The good guys cannot just snap their fingers, fire a few bullets, and win liberation.

Tell me exactly, why did Obama and Trump harbor Gülen? Did you know that the secretary of education, DeVos, has thrown fundraising events with Gülen, because he is a fellow billionaire who made his fortune running religious charter schools (Türk lisesli) throughout the world, scamming voucher programs, just like DeVos.


Rebels are backed not for their politics, but because of policy goals of the backer. Policy goals like "preventing a communist government from forming/working", or "preventing a government from messing with oil trade". If the rebels turn out to be trouble, there will be a next generation of rebels to back to counter the previously backed one. Or some pretext to invade will present itself.


quite a lot of Kurds will beg to differ on the definition of "terrorist" by the AKP/Erdogan?


You're confusing the socialist Kurds with islamists. No one disagrees that Gulenists are terrorists


History for the curious reader:

The law passed months ago and all major providers are given notice last year. Any social media provider, local or foreign, with at least 1M daily user activity is required to assign a legal representative in Turkey now. Internet bandwith of non-obliging companies will be reduced up to 95% incrementally.

Until recently, most social networks including Facebook were silent to this request. They now have representatives as well, alongside Microsoft and a few others.


What is the 95% based on? Current usage?

Or, just some invented number, adjusted according to Erdoğan's political requirements?


Good question. Here is the text of the law (in Turkish): https://www.resmigazete.gov.tr/eskiler/2020/07/20200731-1.ht...

It says "the social network provider's band width to be reduced by ...%"

I'm not a law expert but my guess is that they will send order letters to the ISP's and the ISP's will act the way they see fit. If Erdogan is not impressed, they will give the CEO's a call to improve the bandwidth reduction. If they don't comply, they will have hard time getting the permits to install cables or win government contracts, so they will comply.

When a website is blocked in Turkey, it's up to ISP's to choose the blocking method. Some ISP's blocks are stronger than others(some simply block DNS and you are not affected if you use GoogleDNS or OpenDNS etc. others block the IP so your only recourse is to use VPN). Also, some websites are more blocked than the others(On the same ISP you can have some websites IP blocked, others DNS only).


Knowing the little governments usually know about tech, I'd say it was a random number chosen by a dice roll, guaranteed to be random.


The rumor is it is the magic number that gives you a good enough page load times as long as there is no video content.


Correction: Actual upper limit is 90% bandwidth reduction, not 95%.


Facebook and Google decided to have representatives.I fear that Twitter might decide to have it's own representative. It would be a nightmare here if these companies start censoring everything that the government asks for. Erdoğan is starting loose support. AKP (his party) lost all 3 of the major cities in local elections.

I think the best scenario for Turkey would be Facebook and Google deciding to pull out their representatives from Turkey.

Legally the next step of Turkey would be to block %90 percent of the traffic. Which would be equal to blocking these sites.

There is a lot of AKP/Erdoğan supporters that use these services. This would weaken Erdoğan further.

Most educated people in Turkey do/can use a VPN anyways. Only Erdoğan supporters, which are known to have less/none education (big surprise) would be effected from this.


Using a VPN doesn't require a lot of education, especially if someone else sets it up for you. I think they'll figure it out. The bigger issue will be if Turkey follows China's example and implements a national firewall to block VPNs.


I think you overestimate the intelligence of the average man, or rather his problem solving ability.

You would really be surprised for how many something as simple as “I accidentally removed my bookmarks bar in my web browser, how do I get it back?” is a test that separates the men from the boys. — dare I say that over half of mankind would fail this simple test.


I think you underestimate them, most Turks know what to do with the addresses 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 from the time they were an effective way to circumvent the old youtube block


I remember those days. I think they intercept dns packages these days or block ip addresses.

They also had something called url blocking which was intercepting http packages. Not used anymore because of wide adoption of ssl.


You don't think that most of any country know that, do you?

How many Turks, or people at all, do you know with an i.q. of 100?


The moment a piece of knowledge becomes important, it can spread fast enough to reach almost everyone. "open this in settings, enter these numbers for youtube" doesn't require average iq to remember. And even if you can't recall, you can refer those in need to the person who told you.


They can indeed solicit the help of others, but the original claim was that they could do it on their own.

There are a great many essential operations that people pay a professional to do all the time, even though it be quite easy to do on one's own.


I'm just explaining the diffusion mechanic. Still, one four digit number that is only a single digit that repeats is not hard to remember at all


Most of the popular VPNs are already blocked in Turkey. Before that, most people was using VPNs to access the internet. Nowadays we can only use privately deployed VPN.


It would take a lot of time for VPN usage to propagate to some APK supporters (You haven't met one before believe me).


Depends on the AKP supporters. Those who are barely literate, live in Asherates (villages which are run by often corrupt patriarchs and are told how to vote), and who go to school at imam-hatips? Probably not. The Turks who are educated in the conservative universities in Konya? You'd be surprised. AKP is basically the post-Bush GOP, but Muslim instead of Christian.

I'm not defending the AKP, but painting all of them as rednecks is a huge mistake.


The recent actions of Silicon Valley companies will turn out to be the single biggest threat to global free communication on the Internet. Every two bit dictator will now wave them around to justify locking down the Internet and restrict the sharing of information.

Such a shortsighted move, and yet even on HN we have people thinking it was justified. Frankly, I am very disappointed. We need a revival of late 90s “information should be free” values, and fast.


>Every two bit dictator will now wave them around to justify locking down the Internet and restrict the sharing of information.

Not just dictators. You think EU is going to let American social companies dictate which of their citizens and representatives (!!!) can and cannot have access to what become a standard mass communication channel (i.e. what social media became)? Hell no. They may hate Trump, but they weren't fans of Trump's Twitter/Facebook ban and they sure as hell won't let Jack effin Dorsey be their arbiter of free speech.


Although not outright blocking those websites is a step up, a 90% bandwidth cut is almost the same as blocking them.


I'd say probably worse than blocking them. If Twitter gets blocked, people will find another way to get on Twitter. If it's not blocked, but is very slow, they will visit it less and less.


It's probably a warning of "do what we say or we'll block you because we can't control what you have on your platform". It's a step in the censorship direction.


What about setting up caching proxies inside the country? I expect the practice would eventually be made illegal and cracked on, but with a bit of technical trickery one might be able to keep the cat-and-mouse game running for some significant time.

(I know, I know, I'm looking for technical solutions to a social problem...)


you know when india literally banned internet to 8 million humans, for months ALL connections were simply shut, isps turned off their setup. later when they did let whitelisted websites, i found out not all VPNs worked, it was a "cat and mouse" game but i managed to ssh into a vps i set up through some weird gimmick and ssh tunnelling was the only way to access internet and that too, via 2G internet. it was terrible to say the least and the one phrase constantly being used, big brother style was "misuse" which translated into "dont you dare criticize the govt".

i am saying stuff like this will continue to happen. even the assault against parler has shown such censorship can come in many forms and like it or not, it will happen everywhere https://www.greaterkashmir.com/news/business/4g-suspension-5...


There are a lot of right-wing governments in the world. I can't see the argument for them letting the SV tech companies enter their markets unmolested. If Trump can be banned, why not Erdogan? I imagine it is on the cards sooner or later.

At some point that and the access it gives US intelligence agencies to the population has to become a national security issue. China's policy of locking US companies out of the Chinese market looks prudent in hindsight.


> China's policy of locking US companies out of the Chinese market looks prudent in hindsight.

Exactly. I mean, depending on their market penetration, social media platforms are not just a mirror but an active tool for analysis and influence of people's opinions. Age groups, clicks, hash tags, links, time of posting, etc. Why on Earth would governments leave such power in the hands of the free enterprise? Even in the West this just seems bizarre to me.

I think the days of internationally available social media platforms are numbered. Enterprises like Twitter, Facebook and Google will either concede to selected rules crafted by governments, authoritarian or not, or just get blocked from operating in their markets.

Those who have heavily invested in social media are soon to be in for an unpleasant surprise.


Thats what was said about Wall St after many a blunder. They are still raking it in. Do you know why?


No, I don't know or have an exact opinion about Wall St.

About social media, I think it's mostly a generational issue in governance. Those generations in power are still very little informed about the immense power of social media and are only now beginning to see its effects.

The congress hearings of Zuckerberg, Doursey and Pichai, and the kind of questions being asked there seem to point in that direction.

Needless to say, regulation isn't quite in the best interest of intelligence orgs. More so on the West that is.


It's a billion times easier (and cheaper) to block a social media site than boycott a Wall St firm.


Where else is the money going to go?


If anyone curious, here is the actual (rule of) text[0] (in Turkish) about advertising bans of social media platforms.

[0]: https://www.resmigazete.gov.tr/ilanlar/eskiilanlar/2021/01/2...


Oh also 7 years ago Turkey 'accidentally' created a SSL certificate for google.com https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2013/01/turki...

TURKTRUST (The company that did this) is still a trust authority.


Yet another power gobble, this time over tweets.


I suppose this was inevitable after the Arab Spring and the incoherent failure that "democracy promotion" has been across the Muslim world, along with the rise of right-wing-authoritarian governments.

Twitter is a revolution-causing technology. We were all bigging this up in 2011 when protestors in Tahrir Square overthrew the military government of Egypt demanding a less repressive one.

Unfortunately fewer people paid attention to the followup: the subsequent (apparently free and fair) elections were won by the Islamist party, who immediately tried to impose an Islamist constitution that was in many ways even more repressive. That led to a coup again, effectively going back to a military dictatorship. How it's going now: https://www.hrw.org/world-report/2020/country-chapters/egypt

Merely having free speech and free elections is not enough to ensure that people don't elect a repressive government. The liberal values need to be more widely embedded in the society, and more work needs to be done to counter propaganda and the inevitable racism and religious bigotry and supremacism that leads to unfree governments.

It has also been very convenient for the West to not pay attention to Turkey during the Syria crisis, while they engage in what look like proxy actions on our behalf against Syrian and Russian (and unfortunately Kurdish) forces. And host something like three million refugees.


[flagged]


I would also agree if the government had basic level of fairness to all of its citizens.

You assume Turkey has fair, not corrupted justice system, I can assure you that that's not the case. At the moment, it's quite political and almost impossible to rule anything against AKP or someone they have working relationship. So, a business man who has good relationship with the government can do something terrible and can easily get content that exposes this removed. This is not OK.


Referring to an authoritarian ruler and their clique as if they are the country is a disservice to the oppressed people of said country.


Turkey's population or its government?


Turkey’s position is that they need to have control over the news, the press, and other communication channels, the better to strangle dissent and effect purges.


As opposed to one class controlling what news reaches the populace, e.g., Twitter suppressing Hunter Biden story from NY Post?


Keep this in mind. Whenever you are the oppressor you have to either justify it as 'just moral retribution' or the violence as a 'very small and necessary evil' to prevent a huge catastrophe.. Both sides in the US have the same thinking. They are the good guys no matter what...

IMO, if you can throw 2 nuclear bombs on cities and still think of yourself as the good guys in that context.. I'm sure you can do anything you want and still think of yourself as good guys...


> As opposed to one class controlling

Not "as opposed" to that. It's the same sort of control, but much more so, and worse — and unless you actually think Turkey's control will make it better, it risks potentially being a bit of a distraction.


The current Turkish government seems to be looking out for the health and well being of it's citizens. That's why it required all of them to install the government issued CA cert so they could monitor everyone's connections for anything that might cause a problem.


Why?


Turkey has around 80milion people as its population and an elected government. I think these people have the right to summon an ambassador from not just twitter but all big tech giants.


Isn't it a bit of an admission though? Global corps are effectively as powerful as most nation-states now, to the point you need "ambassadors". I expect the next step will be to agree on a Geneva-like convention on this sort of diplomatic mission, where the local representative is guaranteed immunity in exchange for accepting equal representation of a country in the corporation.


Isn't it better to admit it than to not do anything about it?


They weren't just embassies, and the 'ambassadors' weren't just representing the companies, these are state censorship bureaus.


Does the "ambassador of Twitter" has diplomatic immunity, or they can send the ambassador to hail if Twitter breaks a local law?


Does anybody know if this move is in any way related to the recent Trump/Parler bans?

The article doesn't mention any relation but the timing seems to suggest it could be related


It’s not, it was in the making for a long time. TV censorship and regulations body got its power over the internet and the laws leading to this were passed way before the recent US events.

Netflix had to cancel the production of a Turkish TV show for having a gay character in the lead and remove content that the government doesn't like.

This is happening to Twitter, Youtube etc. now because the time given for them to comply ran out.


Jack Dorsey took the initiative to side with the people who tried to overthrow the Turkish government in 2016. I'm surprised Twitter still survives. The MSM almost entirely ignores this because they're fixated on this "strongman" narrative that makes American liberals feel good about themselves.


Proof? My understanding is that the Twitter block in 2016 had less to do with Twitter as a company and more to do with Tayipp not being able to control the flow of information.

Remember Wikipedia was blocked because Tayipp's page was painted honestly, which he found to be very unflattering, and because Wikimedia refused to remove references to the recorded/leaked conversations about money laundering with his (Berkeley-educated) nitwit song Bilal (There is a saying here when somebody does not understand what you are saying: "Explain it as if you are explaining it to Bilal".

This is also why soundcloud was blocked for 3 years, because people used it to post the recordings of him telling Bilal to remove all of the cash from the family houses in case they were searched.


I want to read about this, any sources?


Chinese we were real visionaries here, rest of the countries are catching up.


China is banning twitter because China wants to control who sees what on the platform, which I'm presuming Twitter has refused to do. There's nothing visionary about this. It's called censorship.


I think parent was ironically saying that now even the governments that were criticizing china for censorship are starting to feel they should act in the same way over the main social media platforms. It is sad but is is what's happening right now.


I'm pretty sure that's what Turkey is doing here too. This is Turkey catching up to Twitter.

Let's hope the West doesn't try to catch up as well.


Don't hope, shout it from the rooftops.


I think they also don't want to cede control of their tech marketplace to US competitors like Google, Twitter, Facebook etc which is what could happen if they just allow anything in.


Nobody gets this is a joke...hah


Does China not have ads?


Not without representation.


https://www.greaterkashmir.com/news/business/4g-suspension-5...

this is going to happen to turkey too... people going full vpn, then govt banning vpn, then using shit like kazhakistan certificate thing and before you know it, full on china GFW.




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