Users Need to Switch Off WiFi When Not Using Internet For This Reason

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Internet disruptions along with blocking access to social media platforms have turned into “knee-jerk responses to protests or civil unrest worldwide,” says Gabriele Racaityte-Racai, communications manager at Surfshark. According to an social media censorship tracker maintained by Surfshark, a virtual private network (VPN) service provider, one in three countries across the globe have blocked social media either permanently or sporadically. The social media censorship tracker is said to cover internet practices in 185 countries across the globe from 2015 with Surfshark last updating the tracker on April 6, 2021.

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India No Exception to Internet Disruptions, Social Media Shutdowns: Racai

Racai told TelecomTalk that “at least” 63 off the 185 countries have either blocked or “heavily disrupted access to social media” in the past six years period with “India being no exception.”

“Moreover, the Indian Telegraph Act of 1883 states that the government can legally spy on its citizens,” Racai told TelecomTalk in an email interview. “Unfortunately, India is among the countries that relatively often use the Internet to suppress rather than empower its citizens.”

In the past week, it has been reported that Twitter, one of the popular social media platforms complied with the Indian government request to censor over 50 tweets about the government’s handling of the pandemic.

Surfshark highlighted that the countries in Asia and Africa “block access to social media the most” as compared to Australia and Oceania with “zero recorded cases of social media restrictions.” Further, it was also said that the practice of restricting access to social media is “usually the product of anti-democratic governments seeking to suppress citizens’ freedom.”