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Twitter reinstates banned Bollywood star amid Modi doc furor by AFP Staff Writers Washington (AFP) Jan 25, 2023 The Twitter account of Bollywood actress Kangana Ranaut has been reinstated after a two-year ban for violating policies on hateful conduct and abusive behavior. Ranaut joined thousands of other previously banned accounts - including that of former US president Donald Trump - reactivated after Tesla boss Elon Musk bought the social media giant in October for $44 billion. "Hello everyone, it's nice to be back here," Ranaut tweeted on Tuesday before writing a Twitter thread slamming India's film industry as "crass" and obsessed with money. Ranaut, the award-winning star of 2014's "Queen" and 2015's "Tanu Weds Manu Returns," had attracted controversy over her outspoken social media presence and frequent spats with fellow actors and filmmakers. She is also an ardent supporter of Hindu nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi and was kicked off Twitter in May 2021 for treating his political opponent Mamata Banerjee as a "monster". The 35-year-old actress urged the prime minister to become a "super gundai" (super thug) in his fight against her. Modi's ruling Bharatiya Janata Party had recently suffered an electoral drubbing at the hands of Banerjee in West Bengal state. Ranaut had also attacked pop superstar Rihanna for tweeting about mass protests by farmers in India, calling the singer "a fool" and the farmers "terrorists" for opposing new agriculture laws. Twitter's reinstatement of Ranaut came as Twitter and other social media platforms were under fire for obeying a government order to block links to a BBC documentary about Modi's role during deadly 2002 sectarian riots. Activists especially criticized the takedown by Twitter since Musk has described himself as a free speech "absolutist" and accused the platform's previous ownership of bending to US government demands on content matters. According to the Guardian, links to the documentary on about 50 Twitter accounts were removed as well as on an unspecified number of YouTube channels. "This use of an emergency law as a censorship mechanism is a very worrying development but it's far from the first time this has happened (in India)," Prateek Waghre, of the Internet Freedom Foundation told the Guardian. arp/tjj
Google cuts 12,000 jobs as tech woes bite again New York (AFP) Jan 21, 2023 Google's parent company Alphabet announced Friday it will cut about 12,000 jobs globally, citing a changing economic reality as it became the latest US tech giant to enact large-scale restructuring. The layoffs come a day after Microsoft said it would reduce staff numbers by 10,000 in the coming months, following similar cuts by Facebook owner Meta, Amazon and Twitter as the tech sector girds for economic downturn. The cuts follow a major hiring spree during the height of the coronavirus pandemi ... read more
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