For many, online "trolls" are the scourge of the internet, but rights campaigners in Britain are increasingly leaping to their defence amid a string of criminal trials over tweets and Facebook...
- Sun
- May 19, 2013
- Updated: 9:25pm
Trending topics
Compromise aims to safeguard children against obscene sites
Internet service providers will join a local NGO to help parents screen out obscene and indecent websites available to...
Copyright owners say internet service providers (ISPs) should bear the legal responsibility for disclosing details of online infringements.
The withdrawal of charges against Chung Yik-tin has left a cloud over the effectiveness of existing laws in controlling the distribution of photographs on the internet.
Lawmaker and...
London
Depraved, shocking, perverted, disgusting, immoral - these are just some of the words applied to the films comprising the Barbican Centre's new season, Seduced: Sex and...
Detectives will be given more information to fight illegal gambling during World Cup, says watchdog
Denny Ho Kwok-leung's career spans the disparate spheres of academia, pop culture and, most recently, showbiz.
By day, Professor Ho teaches in the applied social sciences department...
With reference to the report headlined, 'Internet providers under threat' (South China Morning Post, April 20), we are concerned, not about the legal liability of Internet service providers (ISPs...
Censors had their knuckles rapped yesterday when the SAR's highest court ordered them to explain how their decisions were reached.
The Court of Final Appeal said it was not good...
The Internet is to be brought within the scope of Hong Kong's anti-pornography laws in an attempt to control obscene material available to local users of the worldwide computer network.
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