Skip to main content

Home/ ARIN6902 Internet Cultures and Governance/ Group items tagged violence

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Andra Keay

SMH against violent video games sold to kids through laxness - 0 views

  •  
    "A national review of computer game classification laws is currently in progress and work is also under way to develop proposals to improve compliance by retailers."" The article also leads with the factlet that Aust is one of only Western nations WITHOUT an R18+. On this front, the current internet governance proposals looks like a lay down misere.
Amanda Lansdowne

Social Networks in Kyrgyzstan Helping to Cope with Fallout from Disorder | EurasiaNet.org - 0 views

  •  
    A really interesting article on the use of social networking platforms during and after protests in Kyrgyzstan. Twitter, Facebook and local forum, Diesel are important sites for citizens to report, share information and discuss issues in a relatively impartial environment as the media has increasingly come under the power of the President. In April protests took place in the captial Bishkek against President Bakiyev. The social networking sites allowed poeple to hear what was going on. It also facilitated groups forming to attempt curbing the violence that was taking place. The downside to this form of communication in this situation was the inflammatory comments that was essentially fear - mongering were posted. Some were found to be untrue, and some believe that it was the Russians attempting to influence the situation in Kyrgyzstan.
Tom Champion

Right-Wing Extremists Organize and Promote Violence on Facebook -- Should the Feds Bust... - 0 views

  •  
    A wide range of groups, from patriot organizations to militias and even white supremacists, are using social networking sites like Facebook, MySpace, Twitter and YouTube to organize and even espouse illegal activities. Racism has never been so easy.
César Albarrán Torres

BBC News - Former Mexico presidential candidate 'missing' - 1 views

  • The BBC's Inma Gil in Mexico City says the disappearance of the man known as "Diego the boss" has sparked all sorts of speculation in a country ravaged by drug related violence.
  • Some local media reported he had been kidnapped, others that he had been killed.
  •  
    Manuel Espino, leader of the PAN, Mexico's conservative party, twitted that Diego Fernandez de Ceballos, the politician who is missing, had been killed. He later said sorry and admited the information was not confirmed/true. But was it? Twitter's immediacy can put politicians in the spotlight even if that is not their intention. 
1 - 4 of 4
Showing 20 items per page