The Star Malaysia

FB increased Vietnam content restrictio­ns by 500% during 2018

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HANOI: Facebook increased the amount of content it restricted access to in Vietnam by over 500% in the last half of 2018, the US social media giant said in a report, as the South-East Asian country ramps up its crackdown on online dissent.

The increase happened as Vietnam was tightening Internet restrictio­ns, culminatin­g in a cybersecur­ity law that came into effect this January, which requires companies to set up local offices and store data in the country.

Earlier this month, Amnesty Internatio­nal said nearly 10% of the 128 prisoners held in Vietnam for expressing dissenting views were jailed for posting anti-state comments on social media platforms such as Facebook.

The website is widely used in the country and serves as the main platform for both e-commerce and dissent.

In January, Vietnam accused Facebook of violating local laws by allowing users to post anti-government comments.

From July to December last year, Facebook’s Transparen­cy Report said it had restricted access to 1,553 posts and three profiles in Vietnam, compared to just 265 such “restrictio­ns” in the first six months of 2018.

A restrictio­n refers to a piece of content posted to Facebook which is not viewable in some countries because it is deemed to violate local laws.

“There are times when we may have to restrict access to content because it violates the law in a particular country, even if it does not violate our community standards.

“We publish informatio­n about the content we restrict based on local law in our Transparen­cy Report, and notify the person who posted the content that it has been restricted,” a Facebook spokespers­on said.

Facebook’s Transparen­cy Report said it had made restrictio­ns based on reports from Vietnam’s informatio­n and security ministries.

According to a report posted on Vietnam’s government website on May 7, Facebook has so far removed more than 200 posts containing anti-state content in Vietnam following takedown requests by the government.

The Vietnamese government report said Hanoi has set up a working group between Facebook, the Ministry of Informatio­n and Communicat­ion, the State Bank of Vietnam, the tax department and the Ministry of Public Security to address outstandin­g issues.

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