Your search
Results 43 resources
-
The Committee to Protect Journalists urges Jordanian authorities to lift Wednesday’s ban on a dozen online news outlets for “spreading media poison and attacking Jordan,” following the publication of allegations that the government unfairly profited from aid to Gaza.
-
India's “Operation Sindoor” sparked Pakistani retaliation and edged both nuclear-armed nations toward war, while Indian TV channels erupted in disinformation, blaring sirens, shouting anchors, and viral fake videos.
-
India's “Operation Sindoor” sparked Pakistani retaliation and edged both nuclear-armed nations toward war, while Indian TV channels erupted in disinformation, blaring sirens, shouting anchors, and viral fake videos.
-
The rise of deepfake technology is challenging courts to reconsider how evidence is authenticated and presented. While courts have long dealt with fabricated evidence, the accessibility of artificial intelligence (AI) tools has made it easier than ever to create convincing fake images, videos, and audio recordings.
-
In its annual report, the human rights watchdog for the Americas expressed concern about President Milei’s austerity measures and violent discourse. The IACHR observed “setbacks in memory, truth and justice policies” including layoffs in the Human Rights Secretariat and the closure of programs and specialized entities.
-
From shadow bans to account removals, tech platforms are censoring Palestinian speech while ignoring hate speech by Israeli figures.
-
From shadow bans to account removals, tech platforms are censoring Palestinian speech while ignoring hate speech by Israeli figures.
-
Although the videos have addressed the political tensions within the CCP, many find the narratives unconvincing, largely because the U.S has lost its moral high ground under president Donald Trump.
-
Although the videos have addressed the political tensions within the CCP, many find the narratives unconvincing, largely because the U.S has lost its moral high ground under president Donald Trump.
-
We are alarmed by executive orders issued by the Indian government restricting access to an alarming spectrum of online content, including requiring social media platform X to block access to over 8,000 accounts, including those belonging to journalists, human rights organisations, and independent media outlets. In today’s digital age, the many layers of conflict include the digital realm and efforts to control the information ecosystem. These orders are part of a broader pattern of digital censorship.
-
We are alarmed by executive orders issued by the Indian government restricting access to an alarming spectrum of online content, including requiring social media platform X to block access to over 8,000 accounts, including those belonging to journalists, human rights organisations, and independent media outlets. In today’s digital age, the many layers of conflict include the digital realm and efforts to control the information ecosystem. These orders are part of a broader pattern of digital censorship.
-
On May 8, 2025, the X account of Ekrem İmamoğlu, the jailed mayor of Istanbul and the opposition's presidential candidate, was blocked in Turkey following a court order. The authorities cited a tweet from İmamoğlu’s account, which they claimed could incite criminal activity. The restriction has faced widespread backlash from legal experts, political allies, and digital rights advocates, who view it as an attempt to silence dissenting voices ahead of the 2028 presidential elections.
-
This archive represents the largest publicly available collection of materials relating to (allegations of) British war crimes in Iraq. It brings together documents from a wide variety of sources, including judgments and rulings in a range of court cases, submissions to the International Criminal Court, witness statements, submitted evidence and findings from a number of investigative mechanisms, evidence gathered in public inquiries, and information released through the Freedom of Information Act.
-
Article 24 has been widely used as a legal tool to prosecute journalists, lawyers, and human rights defenders, contributing to the suppression of media diversity, encouraging self-censorship, and discouraging public engagement in democratic debate.
-
Not long ago, anyone could comb through a wide range of official data from China. Then it started to disappear. Land sales measures, foreign investment data and unemployment indicators have gone dark in recent years. Data on cremations and a business confidence index have been cut off. Even official soy sauce production reports are gone. In all, Chinese officials have stopped publishing hundreds of data points once used by researchers and investors, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis.
-
While the United States’ lack of a comprehensive federal privacy law allows privacy harms to continue threatening Americans daily, 23andMe’s recent bankruptcy shines a spotlight on the problem.
-
In Gaza, it is not merely a few souls, but two million human beings who daily beg for the basic right to exist.
-
Data can fight fraud, but only if we break down silos without breaking trust. This paper explores how the federal government can expand data sharing to prevent fraud while upholding privacy, outlining a path to smarter, safer governance.
-
A deadly militant attack in Pahalgam Valley, in Indian-administered Kashmir, has rapidly increased tensions between the neighbors India and Pakistan, prompting retaliatory diplomatic measures.
-
A deadly militant attack in Pahalgam Valley, in Indian-administered Kashmir, has rapidly increased tensions between the neighbors India and Pakistan, prompting retaliatory diplomatic measures.
Explore
Resource
Resource type
Publication year
-
Between 2000 and 2026
(43)
-
Between 2020 and 2026
(43)
- 2025 (43)
-
Between 2020 and 2026
(43)
Online resource
- yes (43)