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UKHRB Round Up 17 to 24 February: Human Rights in Cyberspace

In the News 

Caroline Flack appearing at Highbury Corner Magistrates’ Court

The intersection between technology and human rights is growing exponentially. In places, the growth is immensely productive. The internet has become integral to how we communicate in moments of historic crisis and transformation. Social networks have played a complex and contradictory role in pivotal episodes from the Arab Spring to #MeToo. For more than three billion people, the internet directly facilitates access to news and information, religion and politics, markets and trade, and even justice. In this country, half the population gets their news from social media. In 2016, a report from the Human Rights Council of the United Nations General Assembly declared access to the internet to be a basic human right. This blog post is itself both byproduct and contributor to the phenomenon. 

But the growth has been rapid, uncontrolled and, at times, malignant. In a recent paper on online disinformation and political discourse, Kate Jones identifies online distortions to electoral and political processes which threaten to undermine democracy and facilitate non-compliance with existing human rights law. As well as examining impact on elections in England and the United States, Jones cites Facebook’s contribution to the genocide in Myanmar, a resurgence of intercommunal violence in Sri Lanka, and misinformation in India [p.14]. The Facebook-Cambridge Analytica scandal in early 2018 revealed that millions of people’s private data had been harvested without their consent. Earlier this month, the Met’s decision to begin operational use of facial recognition technology raised wider concerns among groups including Amnesty International and Liberty about the balance to be struck between enforcement and civil liberties. 

A number of stories published between Monday 17 and Monday 24 February are indicative of the possibilities and problems posed by digital platforms and technologies. 

The most high-profile of these stories was the death of the Love Island presenter Caroline Flack. Almost 30 complaints about the Mail Online have been made to the  Independent Press Standards Organisation after it shared details of her death in a manner described as “reckless, irresponsible and dangerous.” Aside from prompting calls for stricter press regulation to safeguard the health and human rights of people in the public eye, and concerns among barristers about the way the justice system deals with vulnerable defendants, attention has been drawn to the fact that Flack’s decision to take her own life was made in the face of virulent and sustained online abuse by members of the public. In response, a spokesperson for Number 10 has called on social media firms to “go further” to remove unacceptable content from their platforms. Labour leadership contenders Kier Starmer and Lisa Nandy were among those who expressed their disquiet over the  current social media situation. The incident has drawn attention to the fact that women, and women of colour in particular, are disproportionately targeted for online abuse, and that this has a stifling effect on freedom of expression. 

In a strange parallel, the UN’s special rapporteur on torture will present a report to the UN human rights council in Geneva later this month highlighting his fears over the development of psychological cybertorture to circumvent the more widely understood ban on the physical infliction of pain. Rapporteur Nils Melzer expressed his concern that the internet could become a medium for systematic, government-sponsored threats and harassment to inflict levels of levels of anxiety, stress, shame and guilt amounting to ‘severe mental suffering’ sufficient for a finding of torture.

Developments in technology have the potential to give users access to information, opportunities and communication platforms free from geographic borders and socio-economic borders. However, in many areas, lines need to be drawn. Should employers be able to install computer monitoring software or motion devices to check whether desks are in use? How can individuals be protected from public malice or state interference? How do we balance the legitimate and effective use of online surveillance to keep citizens safe against those same citizens’ civil liberties? As yet, the government’s initial response to online harms leaves many issues unclear or undecided

In Other News 

In the Courts 

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