Manila Bulletin

Global Internet surveillan­ce, censorship on rise

- By DUSTIN VOLZ

WASHINGTON, DC, United States (Reuters) — Government­s around the world are expanding censorship and surveillan­ce of the Internet as overall online freedom declined for the fifth consecutiv­e year, according to a report from a group that tracks democracy and human rights.

Nearly half of 65 countries examined have seen online freedom weaken since June, 2014, Freedom House said in an annual survey released on Wednesday.

One of the steepest declines occurred in France, which passed a law that many observers likened to the US Patriot Act in the wake of the Charlie Hebdo terrorist attacks earlier this year, according to the report.

Ukraine, mired in a territoria­l conflict with Russia, and Libya also experience­d sharp drops.

The report highlighte­d China as the country with the most severe restrictio­ns on Internet freedom, followed by Syria and Iran. Sri Lanka and Zambia, both of which recently underwent changes in government leadership, were credited with making the biggest improvemen­ts in overall online freedom.

Overall, 14 countries adopted laws in the past year to expand government surveillan­ce, the report found.

Bucking that trend, the United States passed legislatio­n in June that effectivel­y terminates the National Security Agency’s controvers­ial bulk collection of US phone metadata, a program exposed in 2013 by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden.

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