Posts Tagged ‘Twitter’

Indians closer fined $750 for `reckless’ tweet

Saturday, April 21st, 2012

Cleveland Indians closer Chris Perez is considering appealing a $750 fine from Major League Baseball for a “reckless” message on his Twitter account after a bench-clearing scuffle last weekend in Kansas City.

The pitcher said Friday he wants an explanation from MLB about what is and isn’t acceptable on Twitter, because he believes his post was far from egregious.

“Obviously MLB did. It caught me off guard,” Perez said Friday in an interview with The Associated Press before Cleveland opened a weekend series at Oakland. “I can go through the union and I’m still waiting to hear back what my agent wants to do. It’s not really about the money, it’s about the principle. I don’t know if I’m the first one ever. I’m getting the most publicity out of it. I don’t want to just lie down and let them have full reign, because right now there are no guidelines, so how are we supposed to know? That’s what I want to get out of it. If I crossed the line, fine, but what’s the line?”

After batters for both the Indians and Royals were hit by pitches, touching off two bench-clearing dustups last Saturday, Perez posted a message on his account, (at)chrisperez54, that said: “Huge team win tonight; time for a sweep to tell the Royals it’s not ‘Our Time’, it’s (hash)TribeTime. P.S. You hit us, we hit you. Period.”

On Wednesday, Perez received a fine from Joe Garagiola Jr. in the commissioner’s office. He told Perez he “demonstrated a reckless disregard for the safety of the players on both clubs.”

“I think he overreacted,” Perez said. “If I were to tweet and then I pitched on Sunday and hit somebody or we did, then that could be intent. That’s a little different. We had a normal game. The way we look at it, I think everything’s in the past. I don’t think the next time we play them there’s going to be a beanball war. We’ve been competing against each other, basically the same teams, for four years now. We both want to get to the same spot.”

Perez isn’t sure Garagiola Jr. even saw the post, which the pitcher said “our fans, obviously they liked it, and the Kansas City fans hated it.”

Cleveland won the game Saturday at Kansas City 11-9 in 10 innings and had won five of six entering the series with the Athletics.

“It’s not like I called out a particular person. It wasn’t even meant toward the Royals,” Perez said. “It was more meant for my teammates that I know are on Twitter: ‘It was a great win, let’s go, let’s turn it into something,’ which we have.”

Perez, who earned his fourth save Thursday, said he always abides by the Indians’ rules for Twitter, too: No tweets 30 minutes prior to the game or for an hour afterward, so not in the clubhouse.

“There’s no need for it inside the locker room, which is fine. I totally agree with that,” he said. “With them pushing it – everywhere you look it’s hashtag whatever – so if they’re going to push it, of course the players are going to push the envelope a little bit sometimes. I’m not one to back away. I stand by what I said. I don’t really care. I really don’t think it was too bad. I mean, it’s the unwritten rule, but you can’t infer what I meant. It’s so vague. Nobody knows what my true intent was. Maybe I was talking about, ‘you hit our pitching staff, our hitters are going to come back and hit your pitching staff.’ In that series, we had a lot of hits.”

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Bela Padilla ‘FHM’ Philippines March Issue Cover Racist?

Tuesday, February 28th, 2012

Kapuso star Bela Padilla is on the cover of the March issue of FHM. However, the original issue has been recalled because of charges that it is racist. When the magazine uploaded the cover to Facebook, the charges of racism went around the Internet.

So, exactly what seems racist about the FHM March issue? The light-skinned Bela Padilla stands in the middle of darker skinned women. Her shadow makes those around her even darker. The clincher is the headline that said, “Stepping out of the shadows.”

A writer named Katrina Stuart Santiago said, the cover was “a display of white supremacist ideology at its most vicious because it’s shameless. It is a display of whiteness against blackness that is sold to us as fact: the white woman can only emerge as her true self from the shadows created by the black girls.”

The star herself took to Twitter to try to help put out the flames over the claims that the cover is racist. She tweeted, “Again, I’m sorry to anyone who was offended by the cover. I’ve just found out that @FHMPhil is releasing a different issue for March.” She seems to be genuinely upset that the cover caused so much controversy.

While the FHM cover was changed because of the racist tones that some people saw in it, Bela Padilla said that the headline made sense in the context of the article included in the magazine’s March issue.

What do you think? Is there any reason why this magazine would be racist on purpose? Why would Padilla even participate in something like that? It seems that people may have read into the cover more than was meant, but then, perhaps it’s still an issue. It obviously got many people fired up, and now there will be a different cover.

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RIP Mr Bean: False rumour of actor Rowan Atkinson’s death trends worldwide on Twitter

Monday, February 27th, 2012

An internet hoax about the death of British actor Rowan Atkinson became the top trending topic worldwide on Twitter today.

Rumours about the apparent demise of the Mr Bean star spread around the globe within hours of a ‘joke’ tweet from a so called ‘internet troll’ on the microblogging site.

The hoax even briefly fooled internet encyclopedia Wikipedia, which displayed Mr Atkinson’s date of death as 26 Febrary, 2012 on his entry page.

Tens of thousands of people latched onto the #RIP Rowan Atkinson hash-tag to express their condolences.

The top world wide trending subject was apparently sparked by a single post from a twitter user based in the Philippines.

Michael Robert Meras posted the message to his 753 followers: ‘Fresh news from Britain, Rowan Sebastian Atkinson (A.K.A. Mr. Bean) passed away this evening.’

Within a few hours the rumours had spread around the globe and ignited an internet frenzy.

Just two hours later, Michael Robert Meras posted another comment saying: ‘OMG! I started the tween RIP Rowan Atkinson, it was just a joke…’

An hour later he added: ‘Shutting down now. Sorry guys, RIP Rowan Atkins was just a joke. Sorry for the matter, I never thought it would be that viral.’

'Joke': Twitter user Michael Robert Meras claimed he started the world wide internet rumours with a joke tweet‘Joke’: Twitter user Michael Robert Meras claimed he started the world wide internet rumours with a joke tweet

Mr Atkinson is not the first global star to be the subject of a death hoax.

Owen Wilson, Charlie Sheen, Adam Sandler and Eddie Murphy are among a growing list of stars to have been killed off in cyberspace.

They were all said to have been tragically killed in snowboarding accidents, according to rumours which have circulated around the internet in recent years.

Morgan Freeman and former popstar Aaron Carter have also been the subject of online death rumours.

Hollywood actor Wilson, 42, was reported to have died in a skiing accident in a dubiously posted article titled ‘Global Associated News’.

The report claimed Wilson had snowboarded into a tree and died in Zermatt, Switzerland.

Error: Rowan Atkinson's Wikipedia entry briefly showed both his birthday and a date of his death. The mistake was quickly correctedError: Rowan Atkinson’s Wikipedia entry briefly showed both his birthday and a date of his death. The mistake was quickly corrected

Alive and well: Mr Atkinson, seen meeting the Queen at a reception to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the year Charles Dickens was born, at Buckingham Palace, earlier this month, is said to be in fine healthAlive and well: Mr Atkinson, seen meeting the Queen at a reception to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the year Charles Dickens was born, at Buckingham Palace, earlier this month, is said to be in fine health

Rowan Atkinson is known by many for playing the role of the hapless Mr BeanRowan Atkinson is known by many for playing the role of the hapless Mr Bean

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Dallas Nation of Islam Leader Calls Jews and Asians “Blood Suckers”

Thursday, February 16th, 2012

Jeffery Muhammad, the Nation of Islam’s (NOI) longtime leader in Dallas, has charged thatJews and Asian-Americans are among those that have exploited African-Americans for decades. Muhammad, minister of the NOI’s Mosque 48, reportedly said that Asian-Americans “are just the latest in a long line of people who have come to this country — like Jews, Italians, Indians and now Asians — who have sucked the blood of and exploited the black community.” 

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Censored By Oprah Winfrey, OWN

Thursday, February 2nd, 2012

Today, February 1, 2012 I saw on my Twitter & Facebook feed that OWN was promoting the Joel Osteen interview for Oprah’s Next Chapter which aired in January.

I immediately posted a facebook comment and went to Oprah.com and also placed a comment, stating: (paraphrasing)

“I’m saddened to see that you’re still promoting the Joel Osteen interview. Early in the Oprah Show you stated you wouldn’t use the show as a platform for hate because of the skinhead show (paraphrasing) but why in 2012 do you feel that it is acceptable to allow and promote Joel Osteen to espouse his lgbt “hate?” This has consequences. There is a cause and effect pattern with this hate. Our kids are killing themselves. I thought that you would understand this?”

Oprah.com states that your comments are under review. So I kept refreshing the page for about an hour and saw other comments being posted except mine. I then went to facebook and my comment was still in the timeline for that show promotion but within a half hour it was taken off. I guess no constructive criticism is allowed to Oprah?

This is 2012 and it is still America, where freedom of speech still reigns. I wasn’t cruel or harsh in my comments or my letter titled, “My Open Letter to Oprah, OWN.” I’m trying to enlighten, trying to teach you Oprah that your show has consequences. It is a universal law, cause and effect. You must know this? Or is something else going on here?

How are we as a society going to move forward in our evolution if we’re not able to freely express our opinions? This goes directly against the OWN mission. How is this uplifting?

I will NOT let this go! I understand that you’re NOT gay and you can never fully understand what happens to US in society on a daily basis.

Our LGBT kids are killing themselves. It’s an epidemic. Who is going to speak for them? Who is going to stand up for them?

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Twitter’s censorship policy stirs up a storm

Sunday, January 29th, 2012

Twitter has promoted itself as a beacon of free speech, and that image was burnished when revolutionaries used the social media service to organize protests during last year’s Arab Spring uprising.

But in what many view as an about-face, Twitter now says it has the power to block tweets in a specific country if the government legally requires it to do so, triggering outrage around the world, especially in Arab countries.

Dissidents and activists there fear the new policy will stifle free speech and thousands of users are threatening to boycott Twitter.

“Is it safe to say that Twitter is selling us out?” asked Egyptian activist Mahmoud Salem.

The flood of criticism was unusual for Twitter, which drapes itself in the First Amendment. Its chief executive, Dick Costolo, refers to it as “the free speech wing of the free speech party.”

Jack Dorsey, who created Twitter, even named one of the conference rooms at his San Francisco company “Tahrir Square” in recognition of the pivotal role that Twitter played in the uprising in Cairo.

But Twitter, like other major Internet companies, is struggling to reconcile its philosophical opposition to censorship with the economic desire to fan out around the globe.

Facebook, Google and Yahoo navigate a complex web of laws and state-imposed restrictions that can be used to suppress dissident voices and sway public opinion.

It is common practice for Internet companies to take down content that is illegal in a particular country.

Twitter insists that it remains fully committed to free speech. It used to be that if Twitter removed a tweet, it vanished from the Web. Now a tweet that violates the law in one country will still be visible in the rest of the world.

Twitter will post a censorship notice whenever a tweet is removed, similar to what Google does.

It will share the removal requests on the Chilling Effects website, which advocates for Internet freedom and tracks take-down notices.

Twitter said it would not remove any tweets unless it is legally required to do so, and then only after an internal review.

Twitter’s general counsel, Alexander Macgillivray, a former Google lawyer who helped the Internet search giant craft its censorship policies, also helped create the chillingeffects.org website while at Harvard.

Yet when legally required, Twitter has removed tweets that infringed on copyrights or link to child pornography.

It says it has endeavored to be transparent. Twitter publicly disclosed that the U.S. government had obtained a court order requiring Twitter to hand over information about four Twitter users in the WikiLeaks investigation.

Twitter said it went public so that the users could fight the request. It says it’s applying that same principle here.

“One of our core values as a company is to defend and respect each user’s voice,” Twitter wrote in a blog post. “We try to keep content up wherever and whenever we can, and we will be transparent with users when we can’t.”

 

Some free-speech advocates defended Twitter, saying it was handing them tools to fight censorship.

Zeynep Tufekci, assistant professor at the University of North Carolina and a fellow at the Harvard Berkman Center for Internet and Society, said she found herself in the unusual position of praising, not condemning, the policies of an Internet company.

“Twitter is setting the bar as high as it can,” Tufekci said. “It does not deserve the reaction it’s getting.”

Said Jillian York, director for international freedom of expression at the Electronic Frontier Foundation: “Once people see how Twitter is implementing this, they will calm down.”

But other groups accused Twitter of siding with censors and demanded that it scrap the new policy.

“Twitter is depriving cyber dissidents in repressive countries of a crucial tool for information and organization,” Reporters Without Borders, a journalist organization, wrote in a letter to Dorsey, Twitter’s executive chairman.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland on Friday credited Twitter with being transparent about its approach to censorship, but said it was too early to tell if policy would harm users.

 

Twitter’s medium for lightning-quick self-expression has powered political protests throughout the world from the Occupy Wall Street movement in the United States to the Arab Spring uprisings in Egypt, Bahrain, Tunisia and Syria.

Nowhere was it a more important tactical tool than in the uprising that overthrew Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.

“Twitter had a massive effect on the course of the revolution before, during and after,” said Ahmad Saied, an Egyptian journalist and a blogger.

Its ambitions to grow from 100 million active users to more than 1 billion may ultimately bring Twitter into conflict with its ideals.

With its expansion into more countries will come increased pressure to censor tweets. If it violates the law in a country where it has employees, those employees risk arrest and prosecution. That includes democracies such as France and Germany, which have strict prohibitions on Nazi propaganda.

“They’ve said their intention is to remain supportive of free speech and to continue to enable people to use Twitter as a tool for organizing and communication,” said Rebecca MacKinnon, a fellow at the New America foundation who follows freedom of expression online. “But we shouldn’t take them at their word. We should look at what they do and hold them to their word.”

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What Would it Take to Get Twitter Unblocked in China?

Friday, January 27th, 2012

Twitter sent its digital street cred tumbling on Thursday night when it announced that it would being selectively censoring content as a way to enter countries with “different ideas” about freedom of expression. Though Twitter has never made promises along the lines of Google’s “Don’t Be Evil,” the move nevertheless comes as a surprise for a company that took pride in helping grease the wheels of last year’s Arab Spring uprisings.

In China, where Twitter is blocked but still accessible to those with the technical know-how to skirt the country’s Web filters, the revelation seems to have hit particularly hard.

Among the first to comment on the announcement was Wen Yunchao, one of many Chinese dissidents who’ve embraced Twitter as an uncensored alternative to China’s own heavily managed microblogging services:

Oh no! @twitter says going to start censoring tweets in certain countries. Pls RT!act.demandprogress.org/act/twitter_ce… 通过@demandprogress

It didn’t take long for speculation to spread that Twitter had announced the change because it planned to make a play for the China market. A number of Chinese users promptly declared their intention boycott the service. Among those leveling the boycott threat was activist artist Ai Weiwei, who wrote in a characteristically pithy post, “If Twitter starts censoring, I’ll stop tweeting”:

推若审查,我即停推。 RT @wenyunchao@aiww 商人在商言商,道这东东,能像谷歌那样最好,不能也不能强求。

But how likely is it that Twitter’s proposed changes are aimed at earning access to the world’s largest population of Internet users?

“Unlikely” says the answer from Beijing- based investor and Internet watcher Bill Bishop.

As Mr. Bishop notes, a large part of the speculation that Twitter might be getting ready to kow-tow to China’s censors stems from Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey’s visit to Shanghai earlier this month, during which he complained about not being able to read his tweets. That trip came almost exactly a year after the founder of another social-media site banned in China, Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, visited Beijing amid talk of trying to tap the Chinese market.

But for all the salivating over China’s potential in board rooms across Silicon Valley, Mr. Bishop says Twitter would have to be “incredibly naive” to think they could wedge their way into the country.

“It would be stupidity,” he says. “One, I don’t think the government would go for it. And two, the market is already saturated.”

Twitter did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The key issue, Mr. Bishop says, is whether or not the government would be able to trust Twitter. One sign that Twitter isn’t likely to do what it takes to earn that trust is its plan to partner with Chilling Effects, an Internet freedom advocacy website, to publish government take-down notices — a problematic strategy in a country where banned keywords are treated like state secrets.

Even if Twitter were somehow able to get in Beijing’s good graces, Mr. Bishop says, it would have almost no shot at competing with home-grown “weibo” microblogging products from Sina and Tencent that are already well-established and offer more features. “Sina Weibo and Tencent Weibo are better products,” he says. “Twitter’s only competitive advantage here is freedom of speech. Once you start censoring, what do you have left to offer?”

Indeed, Mr. Dorsey himself quashed the idea of Twitter being able to break into China inan interview in Hong Kong in October in which he said his company “just can’t compete” in China “and that’s not up to us to change.”

In developing the ability to censor tweets by region, Twitter more likely has different markets in mind. The only countries mentioned by name in the blog post announcing the new policy were France and Germany, both of which, the post notes, ban pro-Nazi content. How to handle that ban is a dilemma that Yahoo, Google and Facebook have all struggled with in Germany.

Mr. Dorsey visited Germany earlier this week to announce his desire to hire a team there.

Twitter’s announcement also acknowledges there are some countries with severe restrictions on speech where the company simply cannot exist.

That’s not to say Twitter’s latest move won’t have an impact on China. Implausible as it may be for the company to establish itself in the country, Mr. Bishop notes, its embrace of content filtering could aid Beijing in making the argument that the Internet is a space in need of censorship.

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Sopa and Pipa would create a consumption-only internet

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012

You may not care about the US bills aimed at censoring the net but you should – they could stop you participating online again

woman surfing the net

‘Sites will be forced to spy on their users, all the time, to make sure you are not talking about sites media firms in the US do not want you to talk about.’ Photograph: Gou Yige/AFP/Getty Images

There are many reasons to dislike Sopa and Pipa, the pair of internet censorship bills working their way through the US Congress. They are (another) example of the influence of corporate money on American politics: US media firms have cumulatively donated tens of millions of dollars to the bills’ authors. They are (another) example of representatives refusal to represent the public: they tried to rush the bills through at the end of last year, with no public consultation. And the proposed technical solution – censorship enforced through the domain name system – would not have the effect they want it to have, but its technical side-effects would break important parts of the internet.

But maybe you don’t care about all of that. Maybe politics bores you, maybe technical details make your eyes glaze over. Here’s why you should care anyway: the proposed law that would result from Sopa and Pipa will only work if you are put under 24-hour digital surveillance.

The old media firms in the US aren’t out to get you personally, of course – they don’t really care about you in particular. What they dislike about you is your willingness to share things with your friends, and with the world at large. Sopa/Pipa would allow private companies to assert that a foreign site is “dedicated to theft of US property”. Once a US media firm had made such an accusation, they could then black out the domain name of the accused site, so that if a user typed ReallyEvil.co.uk into their browser, nothing would happen (all of this could be based on an accusation: Sopa and Pipa seem to regard the niceties of a trial as an undue burden).

The proposed blackout wouldn’t remove the site itself from the internet, of course, it would just make the domain name inert. This is where Sopa and Pipa really get scary. They don’t just propose making US media firms into judge, jury and executioner, they propose forcing every site on the internet to pitch in on the proposed censorship and, critically, they imagine punishing not just the original sites but anyone else who doesn’t censor them well enough.

The scary bit of legalese here is the idea that the law would apply not just to actual copyright violations (the nominal goal of the law) but to any site that was “facilitating the activities” of copyright infringement, a term nowhere defined but vague enough to include mentioning the existence of such sites, which is enough to make them findable. Like a fast-spreading virus, the proposed censorship moves outwards from the domain name system, to include any source of public web content in the US.

If the phrase “any source of public web content” seems like a dry detail, substitute the name of your favourite web publisher: you. The US is, for the moment at least, the world’s premier host of sites that support user-generated material – Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, Wikipedia, Reddit, on and on. And under the proposed law, every one of those sites would have to take steps to prevent publishers, which is to say people, which is to say you, from helping anyone find out about the existence of sites the US media firms don’t like. And since the law doesn’t require a private company to provide any advance notice before the blacklisting, these sites will be forced to spy on their users, in advance and all the time, to make sure you are not talking about sites media firms in the US do not want you to talk about, even if you are not a US citizen.

Sopa and Pipa are, quite simply, an attempt to create a privatised form of international censorship, and because the censorship would have to be nearly total to be effective, they would have a profound and chilling effect on any form of public conversation among ordinary citizens. It would render the internet a place where the only content to be seen or heard or read is produced by professionals, with the rest of use relegated to the role of pure consumption.

As Congress continues to push the bills through, this side-effect of a “consumption-only” internet is starting to look like the goal of the bills in the first place.

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Man arrested over ‘racist’ tweets against Rangers pair

Sunday, January 15th, 2012

The 41-year-old man was detained after Maurice Edu and Kyle Bartley were allegedly subjected to abuse on Twitter.

A man has been arrested in connection with alleged racist comments made against two Rangers players on Twitter.

Strathclyde Police investigated claims that Maurice Edu and Kyle Bartley were subjected to abuse on the social networking site.

Bartley tweeted in response: “Disappointing that in 2012 things like this are still happening. Hopefully the police will take action.”

A police spokeswoman said a 41-year-old man had been arrested and was detained in custody.

“Strathclyde Police continually monitor social networking sites and any reports of criminality will be thoroughly investigated and persons responsible will be dealt with,” the spokeswoman added.

The arrested man is expected to appear at Glasgow Sheriff Court on Monday.

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