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Turkey Erdogan's Tech Minister Gets Hot Greeting In San Francisco-Stop Attacking Internet

by Labor Video Project
Internet freedom and tech workers protested the visit of Turkey President Erdogan's Tech minister Fikri Isik who came to Silicon Valley to urge tech workers to come back and also to do damage control over their repression of democratic communication rights in Turkey.
turkey_free_you_tube_twitter.jpeg
Turkey Erdogan's Tech Minister Gets Hot Greeting In San Francisco-Stop Attacking Internet Freedom!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iftjMp75IK0&feature=youtu.be
Protesters in San Francisco picketed Turkey President's Erdowan's Tech minister Fikri Isik while he was in San Francisco. The Turkish government is seeking to get Turkish tech workers to return to Turkey and do damage control for their systemic attack on democratic communication rights in Turkey.
The government has repressed democratic communication rights and jailed hundreds of journalists for covering the systemic corruption.
The action was initiated by the Turkish American Gezi Platform (TAGP)
About TAGP: An independent group of individuals united to support the Gezi Movement in Turkey, with the hope that these grassroots efforts will contribute to freedom, justice and democracy in Turkey.
Facebook.com/TurkishAmericanGeziPlatform and Twitter.com/TAGeziPlatform and contact us byemailcontact [at] geziplatform.org.
Production of Labor Video Project
http://www.laborvideo.org
For more information:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/turkey/10099280/Analysis-Why-Turkish-protestors-are-furious-with-their-countrys-media.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/26/world/europe/turkish-protesters-are-still-said-to-be-ailing-from-tear-gas.html?src=rechp&_r=0
http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/af179212-7b6b-11e3-a2da-00144feabdc0.html#axzz2qDMt7HAx
http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/journalists-banned-from-entering-police-stations-across-turkey.aspx?pageID=238&nID=59948&NewsCatID=341
http://revolution-news.com/violent-police-repression-teachers-day-protest-ankara-turkey/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nts36k9etOE
§Repression In Turkey
by Labor Video Project
turkey_repression.jpeg
The government is using mass repression and control of the internet to continue privatization and it's corrupt operations
§Protests in Turkey Over Internet Censorship
by Labor Video Project
turkey_protest_over_press_freedom.jpg
Thousands in Turkey have protested the government censorship and efforts to control communication on the internet
§Workers Of Turkey Protest Attack On Gezi
by Labor Video Project
turkishworkersstriketaksim_gezi_130617.jpg
Tens of thousands of workers in Turkey protested against the privatization and attack on Gezi by the government of Erdogan and his corrupt cronies who were stealing the commons from people for private development
800_turkey_twitter-proest_erdowan.jpg
As Turkey’s Erdoğan Blocks Twitter, Dissidents Use Graffiti to Spread Work-Around
BY JOE KLOC 3/21/14 AT 1:54 PM

Demonstrating members of the Turkish Youth Union shout anti-government slogans during a protest against a Twitter ban. STRINGER/REUTERS

Since May 2013, Turkish protesters have used Twitter to share photos, videos and audio recordings of police brutality and expose alleged corruption within the country’s government. On Friday, Turkey’s prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, officially blocked the microblogging site, after explaining that Twitter had failed to “implement court orders and rules of law” dictating that certain material would be censored.

“I don’t care what the international community says,” Erdoğan told a crowd at his campaign rally on Thursday. “Everyone will witness the power of the Turkish Republic.” The speech, translated by the Turkish paper Hürriyet Daily News, comes less than two weeks before the country will vote for its next prime minister.

Similarly, White House spokesman Jay Carney told reporters that the Obama administration was “deeply concerned” about the Twitter ban, as it undermined Turkish citizens’ “ability to exercise freedom of expression.” The comment mirrored long-standing criticisms among many young Turkish people that Erdoğan has been stifling freedom of speech and religion inside the country.

Erdoğan has been waging a war against Twitter for the past 10 months. During the Gezi Park protests last summer, which began in earnest after police used tear gas against environmental activists, Erdoğan referred to Twitter as a “troublemaker.” More recently, in February, he accused a “robot lobby” (bots created by his opponents) of attacking his administration online.

Like the “robot lobby” accusations, Erdoğan’s most recent threats to block Twitter for Turkey’s 10 million users were spurred by a series of audio recordings, shared on the platform, that allegedly expose corruption inside his administration. If the recordings are authentic, they implicate the prime minister in wiretapping and money laundering, as well as attempting to interfere with media coverage—the latter charge not so far-fetched, given the prime minister’s position toward Silicon Valley.

“Turkey has never shied away from censorship in the past,” the Electronic Frontier Foundation’s director for international freedom of expression, Jillian York, tells Newsweek. When you visit a site banned by the government, it points users to the court order responsible for the blockage. York says this latest attempt at censorship “is pretty brazen. It’s been a while since a country has blocked Twitter.”

Turkey now joins China and Iran as the only countries attempting to block the site. Banning or otherwise censoring social media has proved difficult for leaders, as savvy users can readily get around localized censorship using the anonymous Tor network or changing their DNS settings to access the site through servers in other nations.

And plenty of people in Turkey are sophisticated about the Internet and social media. “We’re not talking about Syria,” says York. Almost half of Turkey is on the Internet, and many users have the resources and know-how to get around online censorship. In fact, protesters have already begun graffiting unblocked DNS addresses around the city and sharing them—where else?—on Twitter:

“I don’t think this ban is going to last,” York says.

According to TechCrunch, which compared Twitter activity in Turkey in the past few days, while the ban does seem to have had some negative effect on the number of tweets coming out of the country, it may have done Erdoğan more harm than good in terms of global exposure. Before Thursday, there were about 200 tweets per day around the world that mentioned both “Turkey” and “Twitter.” On Friday, there were more than 80,000.

Globally, Twitter users have begun circulating a poster designed in the style of the Turkish flag but depicting Pac-Man eating Twitter’s bird logo:
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