censorshipBusinessThe Strange Death of the Uyghur InternetBy Masha BorakIdeasIran's Internet Blackouts Are Part of a Global MenaceBy Yasmin GreenIdeasSection 230’s Fate Belongs With Congress—Not the US Supreme CourtBy Jeff KosseffBusinessChina's WeChat Is a Hot New Venue for US Election MisinformationBy Jennifer ConradSecurityThe Challenge of Cracking Iran’s Internet BlockadeBy Lily Hay NewmanBusinessBrazil's Far Right Plots Its Own January 6By Vittoria ElliottSecurityChild Predators Mine Twitch to Prey on KidsBy Lily Hay Newman and Matt BurgessSecurityIran’s Internet Shutdown Hides a Deadly CrackdownBy Matt BurgessBusinessBogus Fears of Censorship Could Spell the End of Content ModerationBy Steven LevySecurityThis Clever Anti-Censorship Tool Lets Russians Read Blocked NewsBy Matt BurgessIdeasProtest Hides in Plain Sight in Hong KongBy Jerrine TanSecurityHow Tor Is Fighting—and Beating—Russian CensorshipBy Matt BurgessSecurityRussia Is Quietly Ramping Up Its Internet Censorship MachineBy Matt BurgessSecurityInstagram Slow to Tackle Bots Targeting Iranian Women’s GroupsBy Lily Hay NewmanBusinessTwitter's Case in India Could Have Massive Ripple EffectsBy Vittoria ElliottBusinessMeta Was Restricting Abortion Content All AlongBy Vittoria ElliottIdeasAre You Ready to Be Surveilled Like a Sex Worker? By Olivia SnowSecurityRussia Is Taking Over Ukraine’s InternetBy Matt BurgessSecurityDisinfo and Hate Speech Flood TikTok Ahead of Kenya’s ElectionsBy Vittoria ElliottBusinessHow the Kremlin Infiltrated Russia’s Facebook By Morgan MeakerBusinessElon Musk’s Twitter Plans Would Mean Less Free Speech for ManyBy Vittoria ElliottBusinessTexas Cites Clarence Thomas to Defend Its Social Media LawBy Jon Brodkin, Ars TechnicaIdeasIf Tech Fails to Design for the Most Vulnerable, It Fails Us AllBy Afsaneh RigotBusinessA ‘Radical’ Ruling Lets Texas Ban Social Media ModerationBy Jon Brodkin, Ars TechnicaMore Stories