
Image 2.2 (taken from google.com/search)

Image 3.3 (taken from google.com/search)
For example in Malaysia, it has helped shift the way politics has been seen in the country. Since January, 2007, the Malaysian government has pushed back at bloggers with defamation suits and the arrest and interrogation of bloggers according to OSC Malaysia (2007). It been said that Malaysian law enshrines free speech as a matter of principle, but the Malaysian sedition law makes restrictions on what can be said about the government or about ethnic groups. The government must license print newspapers in Malaysia, and it has sometimes repealed publishing licenses to newspapers for printing controversial stories. Malaysian defamation law allows prosecution for astronomical damages. Malaysian assembly laws require permits for any gathering in public places (see Wu, (2006) for details). Organizations, even affiliations of bloggers, must have public, named officers.
Reference List
Kelsey, Todd. 2010 “Social Networking Spaces: From Facebook to Twitter and Everything In Between”, Apress, ISBN: 1430225963
Analysis: Tension Between Malaysian Bloggers, Authorities Appears To Intensify, FEA20070914318786. OSC Feature – Malaysia – OSC Analysis 13 Sep 07
Wu, Tang Hang. 2006. Let A Hundred Flowers Bloom: A Malaysian Case Study On Blogging Towards A Democratic Culture. Paper presented at the 3rd Annual Malaysian Research Group In UK and Eire at Manchester Conference Centre, 4th June 2005.
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