Issue 88: Battling Censorship, Considering the Right to be Forgotten

Issue 88: Battling Censorship, Considering the Right to be Forgotten

For this week’s newsletter introduction, I searched the Flikr service for photographs of libraries in Ukraine.
I thought that putting a picture here at the top of a grand reading room with dark wood shelves and neat rows of books would help us remember that a significant part of our world has been turned upside down.
What I didn’t expect to find was an album titled
‘November 2021: Strategic Session on Digital Education Hubs development’
.
Attendees of the strategic session on Digital Education Hubs development.
Source
, CC By-ND
Four months ago, these professionals were gathered together in a room to hear presentations, sort multi-color post-it notes on flip charts, and work together for «the transformation of libraries into Digital Education Hubs».
That is a scene that is very familiar to me, and quite possibly to many of my readers as well.
Now their country is being bombed, its citizens are fleeing, and I doubt anyone is thinking about the transformation of libraries.
Let’s not forget them.
The threads this week:
Minecraft as an Anti-censorship Tool
Right-to-be-Forgotten Tangled with Press Freedoms
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Minecraft as an Anti-censorship Tool
When schools ban books, the strategy often backfires on would-be censors, resulting in greater interest around illicit literature. Similarly, when governments censor the media, groups like Reporters Without Borders spearhead efforts to make such censored material extra visible. Their Uncensored Library project brings together architecture and journalism in an unlikely virtual reality space: the interactive gaming world of Minecraft.

Uncensored Library: Banned Journalism Housed in Virtual Minecraft Architecture
, 99% Invisible, 3-Mar-2022
With help from my teenage son, I got into the
Uncensored Library
on Minecraft.
(A hint for those trying to access it in early 2022: the
instructions
say you need a specific version of Minecraft—that version is now 1.16.5 instead of what is listed in the PDF.)
The «Frequently Asked Questions» book in this world starts with this answer: «Minecraft is available even in countries with cyber censorship. So we build this library to provide a platform for censored journalists, connect people around the world and bring back the truth.»
The content of the library is curated—you don’t have the option of modifying the elements in the Minecraft world.
The books in the library are short…the ones that I saw were each several hundred words long.
Right-to-be-Forgotten Tangled with Press Freedoms
The “right to be forgotten,» which exists in European Union …


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