TikTok ban in India and US could set a risky precedent

Youths act in front of a mobile phone camera while making a TikTok video on the terrace of their residence in Hyderabad on February 14, 2020. (Photo by NOAH SEELAM / AFP)

India recently banned the social media app TikTok, and President Donald Trump has issued an order saying the U.S. will follow suit should the app remain Chinese-owned. CPJ’s consultant technology editor, Madeline Earp, analyzed how the move could have implications for press freedom, particularly by normalizing bans with far more direct consequences for the news media.

Journalists in Algeria spoke to CPJ about their fears of a growing crackdown on the press under the new president, Abdelmadjid Tebboune.

In Belarus, some journalists have quit their jobs at state-owned media outlets because of what they see as their employers’ failure to accurately cover protests. CPJ Russia and Belarus Correspondent Valentinas Mite spoke to Belarusian photographer Tatsiana Tkachova about her decision to quit her state-owned newspaper, and what this moment means for state media.

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Credit: The Washington Post

CPJ and The Washington Post Press Freedom Partnership published an ad today marking two years since Kashmiri journalist Aasif Sultan was imprisoned on trumped-up anti-terrorism charges. His case has been plagued by repeated court delays, and the threat of COVID-19 makes his situation all the more urgent. CPJ also published an open letter calling for his immediate and unconditional release, signed by over 400 journalists, writers, activists, and civil society members.

A closer look | CPJ’s most-read features in August

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