非洲选举中的信息控制和互联网关闭:选举诚信和滥用权力的政治

N. Stremlau, Nathan Dobson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在非洲,互联网关闭正变得越来越普遍,特别是当政府面临竞争或有争议的选举时。它们也象征着全球互联网与其监管之间相互竞争的概念之间日益扩大的裂痕。非洲各国政府辩解说,关闭政府可以解决错误信息和虚假信息,保护选举进程,确保国家安全。国际组织、非政府组织和社交网络平台谴责这是一种不可接受的审查和信息控制形式,是政治行为者试图压制批评者或操纵选举的滥用行为。本文提供另一种解读互联网关闭的方式,将其置于选举期间广泛的信息控制的历史背景中,其中许多被广泛认为是支持竞争性选举的可接受和合法机制。通过提供这样的背景,我们可以问一下,政府关门有什么新鲜之处,以及它们是否可以被视为对社交媒体和选举操纵的真正担忧的适当回应。最后,我们强调了在线内容审核的不平等,这是推动关闭使用的一个经常被忽视的因素,以及社交媒体公司未能有效解决非洲的错误信息和虚假信息,特别是在选举期间。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Information Controls and Internet Shutdowns in African Elections: The Politics of Electoral Integrity and Abuses of Power
Internet shutdowns in Africa are becoming increasingly widespread, particularly when governments face competitive or contentious elections. They have also come to symbolise a widening fracture between competing conceptions of the global Internet and its regulation. Governments in Africa are justifying shutdowns as able address misinformation and disinformation, protect the election process, and ensure national security. International organisations, NGOs, and social networking platforms condemn these as an inadmissible form of censorship and information control, an abuse by political actors seeking to silence critics or manipulate elections. This article offers an alternative reading on internet shutdowns by placing them in the historical context of the wide range of information controls around elections, many of which are widely regarded as being acceptable and legitimate mechanisms to support competitive elections. By offering this context, we can ask what is new about shutdowns and whether they can ever be regarded as a proportionate response to real concerns of social media and election manipulation. We conclude by highlighting the inequalities of online content moderation as an often-overlooked factor in driving the use of shutdowns, and the failure of social media companies to effectively address misinformation and disinformation in Africa, particularly around elections.
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