Thousands of Turkish demonstrators poured into central Istanbul today to protest against the government’s Internet censorship.
Haberturk newspaper said 50,000 joined a protest centered on the city’s Taksim Square, while CNN-Turk reported “hundreds of thousands” taking to the streets in demonstrations across the country.
New regulations from Turkey’s Internet Technologies and Communications Authority set to come into effect on Aug. 22 will require Internet service providers to offer a choice of four filtering options: family, child, domestic or standard. Many websites are expected to be blocked as a result of the filtering measures, Zaman newspaper reported.
More than 600,000 people joined a Facebook page named “Internetime Dokunma!” or “Don’t Touch My Internet!” The group’s organizers say Turkish authorities have already blocked 60,000 websites.
To contact the reporter on this story: Benjamin Harvey in Ankara at bharvey11@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Andrew J. Barden at barden@bloomberg.net
via Thousands March in Istanbul Against Turkish Internet Censorship – Bloomberg.