Free Speech Measure
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A Free Speech Measure is a rights measure for free speech rights (the general ability to communicate one's opinion without constraint from other agents).
- Context:
- value: Free Speech Quantity (from no free speech to unfettered free speech).
- It can range from being a ...
- It can be associated to a Free Speech Right.
- It can include a Censorship Measure.
- …
- Example(s):
- The ones used in “UNESCO's World Trends in Freedom of Expression and Media Development: Global Report 2021/2022” [1].
- …
- Counter-Example(s):
- See: Defamation, Censorship, Free Speech Law.
References
2019
- https://theguardian.com/news/2018/jul/26/the-free-speech-panic-censorship-how-the-right-concocted-a-crisis
- QUOTE: ... The language of “free speech” and “censorship” is old, but the fervour of this panic is new. Of course, this could be entirely due to a sudden rise of censorious behaviour. But this explanation is hard to credit for one obvious reason: the current wave of “free speech” advocacy has coincided directly with the rise of social media, amateur publishing and the “citizen journalism” that is now possible at virtually zero cost. The proliferation of platforms that grant anyone a public voice should, in principle, have put concerns about censorship to rest. After all, even very bad writers with offensive opinions can now see their words published – or broadcast their voices via YouTube and podcasting. By any measure, speech is less regulated or inhibited than ever before. This has spawned some ugly argumentative tactics, including the hostile mobilisation of online supporters against opponents, which have made public debate angrier and less inviting to many. But, as unattractive as this is, it is not censorship. The claim that free speech is under attack is often a mask for other political frustrations and fears. …