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Seminar talk with:

Tamar Megiddo 

 Post Doctoral Fellow at the Minerva Center for the Rule of Law under Extreme Conditions

Online Activism, Digital Domination, and the Rule of Trolls:
Mapping and Theorizing Technological Oppression by Governments

 

Wednesday, November 27, 2019 between 14:15-15:45

 Room 1013, Terrace building, University of Haifa*


Lecture will be recorded and available on YouTube  

Abstract:

The internet and social media have revolutionized activism. In response, governments¬¬ seeking to curb opposition have recently learned to target the very same technologies that gave rise to activist empowerment in the first place. This article challenges the accepted framework for discussing these efforts by governments, focused on surveillance and privacy. It argues, first, that governments’ actions should be evaluated in the aggregate and understood as measures of digital domination, whose harm extends beyond the harm individual privacy. Applying the republican concept of freedom as non-domination, the article suggests that the core harm resulting from governments’ actions is to activists’ freedom. Since activism is a check on the government, these measures also have devastating consequences for the freedom of the citizenry as a whole. Second, the article argues that governments’ reliance on digital militias allows them to sidestep the limits of their legitimate authority, therefore posing a grave threat to the rule of law. Finally, third, the article underscores that governments deploy digital measures of control beyond surveillance. Rather, they (1) gather information on activists; (2) disrupt communication channels; (3) flood online conversation to drown out the opposition; (4) deploy the state’s coercive power based on information gathered, and (5) mobilize digital militias to bully activists online. The article therefore proposes a new conceptual framework: rather than discuss political freedom through the lens of privacy, we ought to retain appreciation of privacy’s importance but refocus the discussion around individual freedom. Similarly, rather than subsume government control measures under the category of surveillance, we ought to recognize the much broader set of tools employed by them.

Paper is available upon request - contact Michal at:  This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

* The Center is located on floor 1 of the Terrace building (Hamadrega). See map
For more details, contact Michal at  This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
 

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