RSF’s recommendations on cyber-censorship
Organisation:
To combat cyber-censorship, Reporters Without Borders (RSF) asks:
Private-sector companies:
Governments:
- To treat unrestricted Internet access and
guaranteed digital freedoms as fundamental rights.
- To adopt laws guaranteeing digital freedoms,
including the protection of privacy and personal data from intrusion by the
police or intelligence services, and establish appropriate appeal mechanisms.
- To ensure that communications surveillance
measures adhere strictly to the principles of legality, need and
proportionality, in accordance with article 19 of the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights.
- To be more open and transparent about
surveillance requests submitted to companies, including the number of requests,
their legal basis and their purpose.
- To bring their policies into line with those of the governments that best control technology exports and sanction companies that cooperate with authoritarian regimes.
The European Union:
- To add unrestricted Internet access and
guaranteed digital freedoms to the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the
European Union.
- In relations between EU members, with other
countries and with international bodies such as the WTO, to treat Internet
surveillance mechanisms as protectionist mechanisms and barriers to trade, and
combat them as such.
- To ensure that there are standardized and uniform procedures for monitoring and controlling surveillance technology and for sanctioning its misuse.
The United Nations
- To reinforce the mandate of the UN Working Group on the issue of Human Rights and Transnational Corporations and other Business Enterprises, in particular, by allowing it to receive individual complaints and to investigate individual cases of human rights violations linked to businesses.
- To consider drafting an international convention on Internet surveillance technology exports under which the exportation of this technology could be controlled and could be banned in the case of a substantial riskthat it could be used to commit or facilitate human rights violations.
Published on
Updated on
14.03.2017