Free Speech Debate

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1We – all human beings – must be free and able to express ourselves, and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas, regardless of frontiers.»
2We defend the internet and all other forms of communication against illegitimate encroachments by both public and private powers.»
3We require and create open, diverse media so we can make well-informed decisions and participate fully in political life.»
4We speak openly and with civility about all kinds of human difference.»
5We allow no taboos in the discussion and dissemination of knowledge.»
6We neither make threats of violence nor accept violent intimidation.»
7We respect the believer but not necessarily the content of the belief.»
8We are all entitled to a private life but should accept such scrutiny as is in the public interest.»
9We should be able to counter slurs on our reputations without stifling legitimate debate.»
10We must be free to challenge all limits to freedom of expression and information justified on such grounds as national security, public order, morality and the protection of intellectual property.»

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Home | Audio/Video | Frontline SMS: using mobile technology for social change

Frontline SMS: using mobile technology for social change

Amy O'Donnell explains how she's using text messages to help African radio stations engage their listeners on important political issues.

Frontline SMS is free, open source software that allows users to send and receive text messages from a group of people through mobile phones, says Amy O’Donnell, radio project manager of the initiative. The technology can be used by healthcare services looking to engage with their communities, by journalists gathering data and to assist with election monitoring. O’Donnell is currently working with Cambridge University and 20 African radio stations to help them engage with their audiences and give listeners a voice on important political issues. “SMS is an extremely powerful tool, even if you do have access to the internet. It’s very immediate,” explains she explains. In combination with other media, she adds, “it really closes the loop and can turn a one way conversation into a discussion.”

(Photo by Ken Banks at kiwanja.net under a Creative Commons Attribution only licence).

This interview by FSD team member Brian Pellot is the first in a series from World Press Day in Tunisia. Our other interviews are with Lauren Wolfe, director of Women Under Siege; Moeed Ahmed, head of new media at Al Jazeera; Kevin Bankston, director of free expression, privacy and intellectual property at The Centre for Democracy and Technology; and Nqobile Sibisi, assistant coordinator on the Future Journalists Programme at Highway Africa.

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Published on: May 17, 2012 | 3 Comments

Comments (3)

Automated machine translations are provided by Google Translate. They should give you a rough idea of what the contributor has said, but cannot be relied on to give an accurate, nuanced translation. Please read them with this in mind.

  1. JuanColmenares says:

    Sounds like a great system, I hope it gets the attention it needs.

  2. arash says:

    بله. ما امروزه شدیدن نیازمند یک جامعه جدید جهانی با نگاهی جدید, کامل ,علمی ,هوشمندانه ,عادلانه و همراه با صلح هستیم.

  3. johnny.english says:

    It took a substantial role in the Arab Spring beside Facebook. The downside is that it is very vulnerable to the control of telecommunications exercised by authoritarian regimes.

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Free Speech Debate is a research project of the Dahrendorf Programme for the Study of Freedom at St Antony's College in the University of Oxford. www.freespeechdebate.ox.ac.uk