Censorship 2.0: #MostCensored countries use digital and traditional tactics to silence media

CPJ released its report on the world’s 10 most censored countries on Tuesday. We found that repressive governments are using sophisticated digital censorship and surveillance alongside more traditional methods to silence independent media. Read more here.

On July 4, the Cuban government issued Decree 370 that establishes the “informatization of society.” Article 68 bans “hosting a site on servers located in a foreign country” and disseminating “information contrary to the social interest, morals, good manners and integrity of people” on public networks. A Cuban blogger, who runs a website hosted abroad, told CPJ, “What do they mean by ‘moral’? Socialist moral? Revolutionary moral? It’s a trap.” Read more here.

Separately in Cuba, Roberto Quiñones, a contributor for the news website CubaNet, was taken to prison Wednesday to serve a year-long sentence of “correctional labor.” Quiñones was arrested and beaten while covering a trial in Guantánamo in April.

Meanwhile in Iran, a columnist was sentenced to 6 months in prison for an Instagram post.

Global press freedom updates

Spotlight

Clashes between protesters and police in Cairo on January 29, 2013, on the second anniversary of the Egyptian revolution. (Mahmoud Abu Zeid, known as Shawkan) Shawkan’s work is on display at St. Ann’s Warehouse in Brooklyn through October 6.

If you happen to be in New York before October 6, make sure to head to St. Ann’s Warehouse in Brooklyn’s DUMBO neighborhood, where CPJ has collaborated on a photo exhibit titled “Journalists Under Fire.” The exhibit is part of Photoville, an annual outdoor photography festival. Inspired in part by CPJ’s book and digital campaign, “The Last Column,” the display presents work of several visual journalists who have been killed or are currently working under threat. It also uses CPJ data to highlight the risks photojournalists face in the line of duty.

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