
Brazilian Supreme Court Justice Luiz Edson Fachin Renews Push for Regulation of Online Speech and “Fake News” Amid Press “Freedom” Forum
By recasting free expression as a threat, Fachin opens the door for power to define the boundaries of truth.
By recasting free expression as a threat, Fachin opens the door for power to define the boundaries of truth.
A committee of speech-policing veterans now holds the keys to defining “harm” under one of the UK’s most sweeping internet laws.
The state tightens its grip on speech not to protect truth, but to police who gets to speak it.
In Strasbourg, Jankowicz rewrites the script, casting Washington as the villain in Europe’s censorship push.
Projects once framed as public service now fall under scrutiny for blurring science with censorship allegations.
Prebunking becomes the new frontier in narrative control as governments and think tanks refine the art of shaping public perception.
Policing transparency collides with digital exposure as Garda leadership eyes curbs on citizen journalism.
What began as a shield against foreign lies became a scalpel for trimming domestic dissent.
Government-backed “anti-misinformation” projects quietly persist under new names and missions, blurring the line between public health outreach and narrative control.
A fresh flood of federal cash aims to prop up legacy media as trust and relevance continue their long unacknowledged decline.
Government officials allegedly tried to price the event out of existence, knowing they couldn’t shut it down outright.
Mastercard’s quiet exit from GARM signals a shift from ad-industry alliances to corporate self-preservation.
The bill challenges whether political neutrality should be the price of nonprofit status.
Germany’s plan to police online speech reads less like policy and more like a control manual in beta.
Ofcom’s notices to Gab and Kiwi Farms mark the first major test of the UK’s extraterritorial approach to online regulation.
Germany’s SPD proposes Medieninnovationsfonds as AfD rises and coalition talks weigh public media funding.
The judge ruled that subjective ratings, even when damaging, don’t meet the bar for defamation.
California’s social media “transparency” law is gutted after legal defeat, leaving only minimal reporting requirements.
Ofcom expands Online Safety Act enforcement to target online misogyny, raising concerns over vague definitions and increased censorship in the UK.
A win for press freedom: Irish police fail in bid to access journalists’ private data through X.
Legacy media outlets wanted Big Tech platforms to be forced to pay them. The law is facing setbacks.
The US government has funneled millions to the Poynter Institute, raising concerns over taxpayer-funded influence on fact-checking and online speech moderation.
London weighs free speech against trade as Washington pressures Labour to amend online censorship laws.
Tim Pool joins Rumble with exclusive content, live political analysis, cultural commentary, and in-depth discussions, strengthening the platform’s independent media presence.
By recasting free expression as a threat, Fachin opens the door for power to define the boundaries of truth.
A committee of speech-policing veterans now holds the keys to defining “harm” under one of the UK’s most sweeping internet laws.
The state tightens its grip on speech not to protect truth, but to police who gets to speak it.
In Strasbourg, Jankowicz rewrites the script, casting Washington as the villain in Europe’s censorship push.
Projects once framed as public service now fall under scrutiny for blurring science with censorship allegations.
Prebunking becomes the new frontier in narrative control as governments and think tanks refine the art of shaping public perception.
Policing transparency collides with digital exposure as Garda leadership eyes curbs on citizen journalism.
What began as a shield against foreign lies became a scalpel for trimming domestic dissent.
Government-backed “anti-misinformation” projects quietly persist under new names and missions, blurring the line between public health outreach and narrative control.
A fresh flood of federal cash aims to prop up legacy media as trust and relevance continue their long unacknowledged decline.
Government officials allegedly tried to price the event out of existence, knowing they couldn’t shut it down outright.
Mastercard’s quiet exit from GARM signals a shift from ad-industry alliances to corporate self-preservation.
The bill challenges whether political neutrality should be the price of nonprofit status.
Germany’s plan to police online speech reads less like policy and more like a control manual in beta.
Ofcom’s notices to Gab and Kiwi Farms mark the first major test of the UK’s extraterritorial approach to online regulation.
Germany’s SPD proposes Medieninnovationsfonds as AfD rises and coalition talks weigh public media funding.
The judge ruled that subjective ratings, even when damaging, don’t meet the bar for defamation.
California’s social media “transparency” law is gutted after legal defeat, leaving only minimal reporting requirements.
Ofcom expands Online Safety Act enforcement to target online misogyny, raising concerns over vague definitions and increased censorship in the UK.
A win for press freedom: Irish police fail in bid to access journalists’ private data through X.
Legacy media outlets wanted Big Tech platforms to be forced to pay them. The law is facing setbacks.
The US government has funneled millions to the Poynter Institute, raising concerns over taxpayer-funded influence on fact-checking and online speech moderation.
London weighs free speech against trade as Washington pressures Labour to amend online censorship laws.
Tim Pool joins Rumble with exclusive content, live political analysis, cultural commentary, and in-depth discussions, strengthening the platform’s independent media presence.