Censorship
as trade barrier
Diani
Citra ; A Fulbright scholar at the Columbia University
Graduate School of Journalism, US; Currently researching digitalization of
television and other related issues
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JAKARTA
POST, 30 Mei 2014
Even after the
criticism he received for censoring Indonesia’s Internet because of
pornography the first time around, Communications and Information Minister
Tifatul Sembiring, decided to go for a second run.
This time it is Vimeo.
Starting from May 11 Indonesian Internet users will no longer be able to
access the high-definition video-sharing site, because the site does not
prohibit nudity in its “no-pornography” content policy.
For the past few
years, human rights and democratization seem to have been causes to which
Tifatul has turned a blind eye and a deaf ear. Condemnation by angry citizens
of his taking away their right to freedom of information has not deterred him
from his crusade against pornography.
Well, maybe there is
one consideration he might pay attention to. Money.
Freedom of information
is a global currency, and Indonesia is steadily losing in the exchange rate.
Many scholars and
politicians have buzzed about the arrival of a new economic order, the
so-called information economy; an economy that is driven by globalization and
powered by information.
Despite the continued
global domination of retail, oil and gas, car manufacturing and finance,
rapid technological development has paved the way for a new industrial sector
in the forefront of the world economy and with it a new set of interests.
The importance of
corporate interests and emphasis on policy-relevant technical expertise
extends to the international sphere, where big corporations, especially
transnational corporations are the central players in global economic
transactions.
In 2010, Google took a
stand against the Chinese government in front of both houses of the US
Congress in favor of Internet freedom, setting a new precedence for the
involvement of a transnational corporation in the making of foreign policy.
This also marked an
important lesson about the world system that is afoot, one that entwines
Internet freedom with human rights, corporate interests and international
trade.
These developments,
combined with an international political order that praises economic security
above everything else mean the debate over the shifting interests and actors
to coincide with these changes grows.
If Indonesia wishes to
fulfill the dream of being the next emerging economy as heralded by many
foreign media and other institutions, it will have to start speaking the
language as the market, and that language is openness.
If there is something
our current government can learn from the authoritarian era of Soeharto, it
should be that blatant and arbitrary censorship is bad for business, if we
wish to participate to the full extent in the global economy.
A regime that had an
extensive 32 years experience in controlling the flow of information and
suppressing dissent had to acknowledge that, even if it were possible, there
would be more economic disadvantages than benefits from restricting the
Internet.
Oftentimes, it’s not
the act of censorship itself. It’s the narrative.
In actuality, within
the larger discourse of freedom of information, limiting pornography is far
down the list of importance in the battle for free speech.
But combine that with
the case of housewife Prita Mulyasari’s imprisonment over a consumer-rights
complaint and the arrest of Benny Handoko for his tweets, Indonesia is
sending a chilling message to the global market.
The Indonesian
government needs to understand the issue of Internet freedom is complex, one
that is not simply subject to morals and decency.
Internet freedom is
crucial to commercial interests and this notion has become even more true in
the information age where media and information communication technology
companies become increasingly significant to the economy and who depend on
continued access to international markets to grow their business.
Internet freedom
includes a promise that makes it more palatable to other governments who
might otherwise have political inclinations to limit it — the promise of global
economic growth spurred by the access and innovation the
Internet affords.
Telecommunications was
one of the few sectors that experienced global growth in 2009. Indonesia is
one of many countries that are tapping that growth.
Last year Indonesia
ratified the agreement with the International Telecommunication Union to
digitalize its broadcast system by 2018. This technology will free a large
section of the spectrum that will be used to support and expand the
capabilities of digital technology.
Billions of rupiah
will be invested to build new digital infrastructure and wares.
Our industry will also
have to invest in a complete makeover of its hardware and equipment at vast
expense.
Throwing an incredible
amount of money to be a part of the 21st century information economy seems to
be the step that our government is taking, so why aren’t we pushing for an
information policy that follows suit? ●
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