Opinion | Warming and Warnings From the High Himalayas – The New York Times

Like the Arctic and Antarctic poles, the Himalayas are warming much faster than other parts of the world, at a rate estimated to be up to three times the global average. Warming has been rapid over the past century. Though temperatures have varied depending on location, they have averaged 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit higher since 2000 compared with the 25-year period preceding it. The Himalayas thus offer a natural experiment: They are showing the havoc that can occur if we continue business as usual with greenhouse gas emissions.

Severe warming in parts of this towering mountain range, which stretches for 1,500 miles across Asia, from Pakistan to Bhutan, is demonstrating, for example, how climate change can drastically disrupt a region’s water cycle. Glaciers have lost mass and retreated significantly. Even moderate projections predict that the region’s massive ice flows will decline by approximately 60 percent by the end of this century, with a large number of glaciers disappearing outright.

Making Pancakes with Acorn Flour

Foundation Operation X for Languages, Cultures and Perspectives

Written by Dyami Millarson

My father and I picked acorns in Leeuwarden this autumn just like last year when we picked acorns for the very first time, turned them into acorn flour for the first time as well and made acorn cookies using the acorn flour that we had produced ourselves. It was a delightful experience last year, there is really nothing more satisfying than producing your own food. So we picked acorns this year as well to turn them into acorn flour. However, unlike last year, we decided to use our acorn flour this year for making pancakes. We observed many Dutch people were making pancakes this year that has been defined by various responses to the pandemic.

We mixed the acorn flour with normal flour just like we did in 2019 for making cookies. We experimented with the proportions and found the right approximate proportions after a few…

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Turkey reins in social media — one platform at a time

another knock against democracy…

Compliance to the new social media law ‘sets a bad precedent’

An Alstom tram set on Istanbul line T1 crossing the Galata Bridge, northbound, December 5, 2013, Istanbul, Turkey. Photo by Mark Ahsmann via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0.

When Turkish President Recip Erdoğan became a grandfather for the fourth time last year, his daughter and son-in-law (then-Minister of Finance) announced the birth of their child over Twitter.

In addition to many celebratory tweets from Erdoğan’s ruling Justice and Development (AKP) followers, the couple received insults, too.

The tweets were eventually taken down and the account was deleted. But these insults led to Erdoğan’s renewed interest in finalizing legislation in the country to centralize control over social media platforms in Turkey.

“Do you understand why we are against social media such as YouTube, Twitter and Netflix? To eradicate such immorality,” President Erdoğan told AKP members during a televised address, referring to the allegedly insulting tweets.

“These platforms do not suit this country. We want these platforms to be banned, taken under control,” Erdoğan said.

The law came as swiftly as the detentions of social media users allegedly behind the insults.

Adopted in July 2020, and effective October 1, 2020, the new social media law (Law on the Regulation of Publications on The Internet and Suppression of Crimes Committed By Means of Such Publications) sets up a series of requirements that will have a lasting impact on digital rights and freedom of expression in Turkey.

Social media companies will be obliged to have an office in Turkey; their representatives will be held accountable in legal affairs; the bandwidth of companies that refuse to open an office will be throttled up to 90%; social media companies will be obliged to store users’ data in Turkey; The companies will have to release a report on their activities every six months; failure to do so will result in a fine of up to 10 million lira ($1.3 million USD).

A year after Turkey restored access to Wikipedia, the country is now grappling with these new restrictions.

Although companies did not comply at first, recent fines have forced some social media giants to cave in, with Tik Tok being among the most recent companies to comply.

How it started

In April 2020, Human Rights Watch reported on how the social media law appeared under a draft law on economic measures to address COVID-19:

The draft law, circulated April 9, stipulates that all platforms accessed by over 1 million users daily must appoint a legal representative in Turkey on whom courts can serve orders to take down content or block access to accounts. Any platform that refuses would see its bandwidth reduced by 50 and then 95%, rendering the platform unusable in Turkey.

These proposed amendments were temporarily withdrawn.

But a month later, Turkey’s Presidential Complex published a 161-page social media guidebook, authored by Fahrettin Altun, head of Media and Communications, with direct advice to “to begin centralizing control of the digital domain.”

Altun believes that social media has become a “life risk” to Turkish citizens who are increasingly imperiled by fast-paced digitization and therefore benefit from the government’s centralization of control of digital spaces.

Journalists and internet freedom advocates described the social media guidebook as a tool for censorship.

“The guidebook was a step toward establishing government control over Twitter and other platforms,” said Fatih Polat, editor-in-chief of the opposition newspaper Evrensel, in an interview with Deutsche Welles (DW).

Gulin Cavus, founder of the Turkish fact-checking network Teyit, said the threat of online disinformation does not come from Turkish citizens, as the guidebook claims, but rather from the government agencies that are “knowingly engaging in manipulation,” speaking to DW.

How it’s going

In November 2020, Turkey fined Facebook, Twitter and YouTube a total of $1.18 million USD for not complying with their new social media law.

The following month, Turkey’s Information and Communication Technologies Authority (BTK) slapped platforms with a new penalty of 30 million Turkish liras ($3.8 million USD) each, for their failure to hire local representatives.

The fines worked. YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok were among the first companies to appoint local representatives.

Facebook also announced on January 18, 2021, that it would open a local office. Last January, Facebook also announced its decision to appoint a local representative in Turkey in compliance with the new regulations.

In their statement Facebook said:

We have been closely following developments on Turkey’s recently amended Internet Law No. 5651 which stipulates new requirements for social media platforms. Like other companies, we have decided to begin the process of appointing a legal entity as a local representative in compliance with the law, while also recognizing how important it is for our platform to be a place where users can exercise their freedom of expression.

This decision does not change Facebook’s Community Standards, nor the global process for reviewing government requests, and we will withdraw the representative if we face pressure on either. We will continue to review and evaluate government requests in accordance with these policies, including our commitments as a Global Network Initiative member, and under the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights. We will continue to report details of the content we restrict, in line with our existing transparency processes.

The TikTok platform said:

TikTok is a powerful platform that gives voice to diverse communities, and we remain focused on providing people in Turkey the opportunity to express themselves creatively through video, from sharing unique cooking skills to easy tutorials on drawing. We’re also committed to respecting local laws in the markets in which we operate, even when we disagree with them. As such, we will comply with the requirements of the law — establishing a local legal entity and providing a local point of contact to the Government in Turkey as a next step to compliance – while we maintain our commitment to the freedom of expression that is fundamental to the creativity that thrives in our community.

In retaliation to companies that refused to comply, the Information and Communication Technologies Authority (BTK) banned online businesses from advertising on Twitter, Periscope and Pinterest, in a decision published in the Official Gazette on January 19.

This move is likely to impact the livelihoods of many in Turkey, at a time when the country is facing economic challenges as a result of an ongoing pandemic.

Meanwhile, the compliance of YouTube, Facebook, TikTok, and other platforms are a “bad precedent that will make it harder for other companies to fight back,” said Electronic Frontier Foundation. EFF was especially critical of YouTube’s decision to comply, given the Turkish government’s history of previous attempts to control the platform.

Turkish officials say the law is similar to Germany’s NetzDG [Network Enforcement Act]. However, experts disagree. Emma Sinclair-Webb, Human Rights Watch Turkey expert, said that unlike in Turkey, Germany has a “clear separation of powers and an independent judiciary.”

According to Engelliweb, a site that documents censored content, as of October 2020, at least 450,000 domains, 140,000 URLs, and 42,000 tweets are currently blocked in Turkey.

On January 21, the International Press Institute (IPI) issued a statement calling on Turkish to withdraw the new law and rescind imposed penalties.

IPI Turkey Program Coordinator Renan Akyavas said:

This law and its penalties threaten the removal of critical voices, including journalists who have been driven from mainstream media, from social media via content removal or self-censorship. Turkey must withdraw this law and all penalties on social media companies issued under it. This law represents a serious expansion of digital censorship and threatens a last bastion for journalists and critical public discussion.

But officials in Ankara are yet to budge.

Written by Arzu Geybullayeva

For Valentine’s Day, Traceable, Transparent Jewelry Supply Chains | Human Rights Watch

Valentines Day Gold Rose “Jewelry companies around the world should ensure that the jewelry they sell is sourced from mines where human rights are respected,” said Juliane Kippenberg, associate children’s rights director at Human Rights Watch. “This Valentine’s Day, consumers buying jewelry for loved ones should send companies a strong message – what symbolizes love and joy should not be made in abusive conditions.”

Labor rights violations, violence, and other abuses have remained a serious problem in gold and diamond mining. Human Rights Watch has documented horrific violence against miners and residents in Venezuela and Zimbabwe, and found hazardous child labor in small-scale mining in Ghanathe PhilippinesMali, and Tanzania. The Covid-19 pandemic, as well as restrictions on movement and blocked trade routes, has created additional human rights risks. Source: For Valentine’s Day, Traceable, Transparent Jewelry Supply Chains | Human Rights Watch

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