Katkıda bulunanlara göre sırala 'BROWN Ian' yazan 5 eklemeler menuAnahtar kelimeler aracılığıyla aramak için Academia (2)Access (17)Africa (6)Animal Rights (1)Anonymity (9)Arab Spring (5)Art (15)Article 19 (1)Atheism (1)Australia (4)Blasphemy (16)Blogger (5)Books (1)Brazil (4)Buddhism (2)Burma (2)Canada (3)Celebrity (5)Censorship (28)Charlie Hebdo (2)China (10)Christianity (13)Civility (33)Colonialism (1)Copyright (7)Corruption (3)Defamation (24)Democracy (20)Denialism (3)Denmark (2)Discrimination (9)Education (16)Egypt (3)Europe (4)Exclusion (1)Facebook (3)Film (1)France (6)Freedom (36)Gaza conflict (1)Genocide (3)Germany (9)Google (5)Governance (10)Hate speech (19)Hinduism (1)History (18)Homosexuality (5)Humour (3)Hungary (1)Hunger strike (1)India (11)Internet (43)Internet companies (1)Islam (21)Israel (1)Japan (2)Journalism (24)Kenya (2)Knowledge (26)Language (10)Latin America (6)Law (51)Lese majesty (1)Liberalism (13)Literature (6)Media (47)Memory laws (2)Middle East (8)Minorities (4)Money (13)Morality (8)Multiculturalism (10)National security (30)Net neutrality (12)Netherlands (3)New Zealand (1)Norway (1)Nudity (5)Occupy movement (1)Open source (2)Pakistan (4)Palestine (1)Piracy (2)Poland (3)Politics (54)Pornography (9)Power (56)Privacy (22)Protest (23)Public Morality (27)Race (1)Radio (2)Regulation (5)Religion (32)Reputation (19)Right to information (47)Russia (2)Satire (13)Saudi Arabia (1)Science (8)Scientology (1)Secrecy (1)Singapore (2)Social media (15)South Africa (5)Southeast Asia (2)Sport (1)Surveillance (2)Syria (1)Technology (20)Terrorism (6)Thailand (1)Turkey (11)Twitter (8)Ukraine (1)United Kingdom (11)United States (16)Violence (28)Whistleblowing (3)Wikileaks (1)Wikipedia (2)YouTube (1) Should ISPs be told to block “adult” content? Internet Service Providers do not merely route data packets from end-to-end, but are heavily involved in monitoring their customers’ online activities. Ian Brown discusses the implications of Britain’s suggested “voluntary” opting out of “adult content”, with little parliamentary and court involvement. Internet access in the age of the surveillance state Oxford University’s Ian Brown asks what Europe can do to protect our digital rights and privacy. Is privacy getting lost in Google’s “cracks and crevices”? A globally-effective privacy regime is a realistic goal, argues Ian Brown. But it needs giants like Google to get behind it. BM İnternet Yönetimi Forumu gibi güzel bir teşkilatın böyle bir yerde ne işi var? Oxford İnternet Enstitüsü’nden Ian Brown Azerbaycan’dan yazıyor. Brown, internet özgürlüğünü baskı altında tutan bir ülkenin internet özgürlüğünün tartışalacağı bir toplantıyı düzenleme hakkı olmalı mıdır, diye soruyor. Ian Brown: How should cyberspace be regulated? In part one of this interview with Timothy Garton Ash, Ian Brown of the Oxford Internet Institute talks about the internet and freedom of expression, net neutrality, internet service providers and censorship by both democratic and autocratic governments.
Should ISPs be told to block “adult” content? Internet Service Providers do not merely route data packets from end-to-end, but are heavily involved in monitoring their customers’ online activities. Ian Brown discusses the implications of Britain’s suggested “voluntary” opting out of “adult content”, with little parliamentary and court involvement.
Internet access in the age of the surveillance state Oxford University’s Ian Brown asks what Europe can do to protect our digital rights and privacy.
Is privacy getting lost in Google’s “cracks and crevices”? A globally-effective privacy regime is a realistic goal, argues Ian Brown. But it needs giants like Google to get behind it.
BM İnternet Yönetimi Forumu gibi güzel bir teşkilatın böyle bir yerde ne işi var? Oxford İnternet Enstitüsü’nden Ian Brown Azerbaycan’dan yazıyor. Brown, internet özgürlüğünü baskı altında tutan bir ülkenin internet özgürlüğünün tartışalacağı bir toplantıyı düzenleme hakkı olmalı mıdır, diye soruyor.
Ian Brown: How should cyberspace be regulated? In part one of this interview with Timothy Garton Ash, Ian Brown of the Oxford Internet Institute talks about the internet and freedom of expression, net neutrality, internet service providers and censorship by both democratic and autocratic governments.