Let's remind everyone what a safe internet actually means. đđ
Share this & Spread the word!
Let's remind everyone what a safe internet actually means. đđ
Share this & Spread the word!
đAnd share this new letter from 60+ Tesla Takedown organizers demanding Democrats protect Section 230: https://www.fightforthefuture.org/news/2025-04-15-tesla-takedown-organizers-letter-democrats-dont-kill-the-tools-we-need-to-organize/
Dear Senator Durbin and Democratic Leaders, As the decentralized organizers of some of the nearly 300 Tesla Takedown protests in the US on March 29, we are writing to tell you to leave Section 230 alone. Without this law to protect our online speech and communities from censorship, we would never have been able to [âŚ]
There would be no more organizing protests like Tesla Takedown online, no more posting about abortion resources or trans healthcare, and no more independent media. With the Trump admin escalating attacks on immigrants, students, journalists, and protestors, we canât afford to lose online organizing spaces and access to information. Tell lawmakers: hands off Section 230!
đWrite to your reps ASAP at: https://www.whatissection230.org/
đŁACTION NEEDED: Tell lawmakers, killing Section 230 is a gift to Trump! Protect online free speech! https://www.whatissection230.org/
âšď¸Background: Senators Dick Durbin and Lindsey Graham are introducing a bill that would âsunsetâ Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. Section 230 is known as the â26 words that created the Internet.â It essentially allows websites to host usersâ speech and engage in good faith moderation without being held legally liable for every post users make. #section230
On March 12, 2024, the Ministry of Corporate Affairs ("MCA") published the Digital Competition Law Report (âReportâ) & Draft Digital Competition Bill, 2024 (âDCB, 2024â) for stakeholder comments.
Read a summary of the suggestions we submitted to the MCA belowđ 1/9
https://internetfreedom.in/iffs-submission-on-the-digital-competition-bill/
IFF submission on the draft Digital Competition Bill, 2024 on May 15, 2024 focusses on four broad areas of concern: friction in the consultation process; inadequacies of the data protection law; potential regulatory overlap with existing and upcoming legislations; and proposed regulatory approach.
In a letter to the MCA, we requested an extension of the deadline for comments. While the MCA only extended it from April 15 to May 15, it allowed stakeholders to submit comments via email apart from the earlier mandatory E-Consultation mode. 2/9
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1tvu2bWFjugPn7LQjD_ALnqposMR2uwZO/view