Information colonialism in the digital age: how civil voices are silenced and sovereignty is stolen

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Daohe · Jun 8, 2025
Since the advent of the digital age, information has evolved beyond a simple tool of communication. It has become a resource for governance, a weapon of perception, and a means of social control. Freedom of speech and information sovereignty—both fundamental for protecting human dignity, group identity, and holding power to account—are now under systematic erosion. […]

Since the advent of the digital age, information has evolved beyond a simple tool of communication. It has become a resource for governance, a weapon of perception, and a means of social control.

Freedom of speech and information sovereignty—both fundamental for protecting human dignity, group identity, and holding power to account—are now under systematic erosion. This decline is driven by the convergence of digital hegemony, platform-based capital monopolies, and expanding state security apparatuses.

On the surface, everyone appears to have the right to speak, information seems everywhere, and public discourse is more active than ever. In reality, what lies beneath is a hidden, systematic war of modern information colonialism.

The true aim of this war is not only to seize data and economic power, but to reshape people’s perception, thinking, beliefs, emotions, and behavior—ultimately dismantling the independence and critical capacity of civil society.

I. The nature and social function of freedom of speech

Freedom of speech is not merely about fulfilling individual desires to express opinions. It is a vital defense mechanism in modern democratic societies. It ensures that:

  • Citizens can criticize power and expose the truth, helping prevent authoritarianism and corruption.
  • Diverse viewpoints can interact and challenge one another, promoting public reason and preventing mass irrationality.
  • Marginalized voices are heard, supporting social justice and inclusion.
  • Free thinking is encouraged, driving cultural innovation and progress.

Once freedom of speech is systematically suppressed, society loses its ability to self-correct. Political power becomes unchecked, elites gain unearned privilege, public understanding grows increasingly one-sided, dissent disappears—and in time, information totalitarianism takes hold.

What passes for “freedom” on modern digital platforms is merely a controlled version of free speech—carefully calculated and tightly managed. Platforms and authorities jointly set the rules, shape acceptable language, and define the boundaries of public discourse. This creates the illusion of vibrant freedom, while in reality it is a slow, simmering process of domestication—boiling the frog without it ever realizing.

II. The strategic value of information sovereignty in global competition

Information sovereignty refers to a nation or society’s ability to independently control and manage its digital information flows, data resources, narrative frameworks, and systems of public perception.

In the digital age, information sovereignty is no longer a secondary issue. It now directly concerns:

  • The effectiveness and legitimacy of governance: Control over data resources shapes a government’s ability to perceive, anticipate, and respond to societal developments.
  • National economic competitiveness: Data has become a new factor of production, playing a crucial role in industrial layout planning, technological innovation, and market advantage.
  • Cultural autonomy and diversity: Maintaining independent narratives is essential for preserving cultural plurality and safeguarding civilizational dignity.
  • The protection of citizen rights: Data sovereignty also determines whether a fair, secure, and trustworthy digital environment can be built—one that protects privacy and freedom of expression.

Who controls data resources holds the power to predict, manipulate, and influence social dynamics and public sentiment. Internationally, information has emerged as a new strategic resource—following energy, finance, and military assets—and the global struggle for information sovereignty is intensifying.

1. Digital superpowers call for open data and human rights—but behind the slogans, they harvest data, shape public opinion, meddle in politics, and support their own agents in developing countries.

2. Digital colonialism is silently infiltrating other societies through social media, search engines, short videos, and trending lists—reshaping how people think, weakening trust in local governments, and deepening social division and confusion.

III. The dual influence of platform capital and state power

Domestically, tech giants have evolved from mere information distributors into dominant gatekeepers of public discourse and manipulators of collective perception. To maximize traffic and profits, they promote emotional, divisive, and shallow content, while pushing down rational, thoughtful, and critical voices—creating a kind of algorithm-driven authoritarianism.

At the same time, the government—seeking stability and control—uses tools like keyword filters, AI monitoring, account bans, shadow bans, and online response teams to manage what can be said online. Together, these tools enable 24/7, full-chain regulation of the digital public sphere.

The collusion between capital and state power has led to a double deprivation for social citizens:

  • Freedom of speech is controlled by platform algorithms and censorship;
  • Information sovereignty is seized by both governments and corporations, leaving individuals powerless over their own digital lives.

Under such a structure, public discourse becomes a hollow spectacle—loud on the surface but monotonous in content, driven by emotion, lacking reason, silencing dissent, and detached from truth.

IV. The operating logic of modern digital colonialism

Unlike traditional colonialism based on military force and territorial occupation, digital colonialism operates through four key mechanisms:

  • Data extraction: Transnational platforms collect local user data—often illegally or semi-legally—for profiling, targeted advertising, and public opinion prediction.
  • Narrative control: Using trending lists, algorithmic distribution, and traffic restrictions, platforms shape popular topics, conceal systemic issues, amplify nationalism, and create a climate of hostility.
  • Cultural erosion: Through content that promotes entertainment, vulgarity, and consumerism, digital platforms undermine individual autonomy, public reason, and cultural confidence—leading to a society driven by distraction and emotion.
  • Cognitive warfare: In key political and social moments, coordinated opinion campaigns are launched to distort public perception, weaken trust in local governments, and elevate proxy influencers aligned with external agendas.

V. The alienation of citizens’ information rights

In today’s digital society, many citizens have become passive digital subjects, showing the following tendencies:

  • Willingly surrendering their privacy in exchange for endless streams of content;
  • Lacking critical thinking and blindly trusting algorithmic recommendations;
  • Seeking a false sense of presence and identity through information servitude;
  • Internalizing self-censorship and instinctively avoiding sensitive expression.

Even as they sense their lack of freedom, they continue to believe in its illusion. Lost in a sea of information, they drift away from truth and judgment—reduced to digital workers and content fodder, feeding the machinery of the platform economy.

VI. Pathways to reclaiming information sovereignty

To break free from modern digital colonialism and restore the rightful sovereignty of citizens over information, the following six strategies are essential:

  1. Establish a Citizens’ Data Protection Charter: Define personal data ownership as belonging to individuals. Neither the state nor platforms should be allowed to access or exploit this data without explicit, legal consent.
  2. Develop independent digital infrastructure: Build homegrown search engines, social media platforms, and public forums to reduce reliance on foreign platforms and assert technological autonomy.
  3. Limit platform power over public discourse: Create independent speech arbitration bodies to protect dissenting voices and prevent manipulation of public opinion.
  4. Promote an international anti-digital-colonial alliance: Form coalitions with other affected nations to resist digital hegemony and reject unilateral data exploitation.
  5. Enhance media literacy education: Equip citizens with the skills to critically evaluate content, resist cognitive manipulation, and become thoughtful, critical digital participants.
  6. Encourage citizen-led information communities: Support the creation of decentralized, autonomous digital communities that enable pluralistic discourse and equal participation.

Conclusion

Information sovereignty and freedom of speech are not abstract ideals—they are essential tools for citizens in modern society to survive and resist digital authoritarianism.

When free expression is fully censored and information sovereignty becomes a plaything for capital and power, civil society loses its ability to self-correct, self-understand, and self-liberate.

If we do not awaken today, the future will hold no free society—only digital prisons and traffic-driven servitude.

Only through action, struggle, and unity can we tear apart the illusion of false freedom, reclaim the information sovereignty that belongs to the people, and rebuild a truly free, just, diverse, and rational digital world.

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台湾の大規模罷免運動:私たちは彼らを選べても、罷免は決してできないのか?

台湾の大規模罷免運動:私たちは彼らを選べても、罷免は決してできないのか?

Kishou · Jul 24, 2025

一乗公益 寄稿 私たちは、世界の民主主義制度における深いレベルの改革というテーマに、引き続き注目していきます。 付録:台湾の罷免制度に関する10の修正提案 序論: 多くの民主主義国家において、国民は「投票で代表者を選ぶ」権利を持つ一方で、「任期中に罷免する」ことは極めて困難です。 これは偶然ではなく、制度設計に「内在する障壁」が組み込まれているからです。近年、台湾で相次いで発生した罷免運動を例にとれば、その制度が実際には機能不全に陥り、民意が制度的に冷遇され、政治的責任追及がほぼ不可能になっている様子が明確に見て取れます。 この背景には、より深い民主主義の問いがあります。 罷免権を持たない民主主義は、制御不能な委任に過ぎません。 有効な罷免メカニズムを持たない制度は、単なる見せかけの政治に過ぎません。 一、台湾における罷免の苦境:現実レベルの「合法的な無効化」 √ 事例1:陳柏惟氏の罷免案(2021年) × 事例2:黄捷氏の罷免案(2021年) × 事例3:鍾東錦氏の罷免案(2024年) これらの事例が示すのは、制度が罷免の道を開きながらも、実際には「罷免阻止の仕組み」を構築しているということです。 二、なぜ罷免制度は「形骸化」しているのでしょうか?台湾における5つの制度的障壁 1. 手続きが複雑で、ハードルが極めて高い 問題は、制度が「罷免」を専門的な闘争に変えてしまい、一般市民が関与しにくい点にあります。 2. 政党による乗っ取りと政治的二極化、罷免を「選挙戦の延長」に貶める 罷免の本質は制度の自浄作用であるはずが、政党が互いに攻撃する道具として利用されています。 3. 市民の動員構造の解体、行動力が高度に分散 現代の民主社会では、個人は「自由」であると同時に「孤立」しています。 4. メディア環境の異質化、言論空間が「偽の民意」を生成 メディアはもはや市民の判断を導くのではなく、政党の方針を固めるのを助ける役割を担っています。 5. 罷免後の制度的な後始末がなく、市民が混乱を恐れる 市民が求めるのは「責任ある是正メカニズム」であり、混乱後の政治の空転ではありません。 三、民主主義には「完全な罷免制度」が不可欠です もし民主主義が公共の列車だとすれば、選挙は乗車であり、罷免はブレーキです。 ブレーキシステムを持たない民主主義は、自由な制度ではなく、制度的な制御不能に陥っています。 ▶ 完全な罷免制度は、以下の5つの要素を含むべきです。 構成要素 機能 台湾の現状 改善提案 ① 容易な発動 市民が発起でき、政党の支援は不要であるべきです。 極めて高いハードルです。 第1段階のハードルを0.5%にまで引き下げます。 ② 公正な審査 署名、資格、公文書のプロセスがすべて公開されるべきです。 行政権による審査が曖昧です。 超党派の独立罷免委員会の設立。 ③ 政党による操作の排除 […]

台湾大罢免:我们能选他们,却永远罢不掉他们?

台湾大罢免:我们能选他们,却永远罢不掉他们?

Kishou · Jul 24, 2025

一乘公益 出品 我们将持续关注世界民主制度的深层改革议题。 附:台湾罢免制度的十大修正建议 引言: 在多数民主国家,人民拥有“投票选人”的权利,却极难“中途罢人”。 这不是偶然,而是制度设计上的“内建屏障”。以台湾近年来接连爆发的罢免案为例,我们可以清晰地看到:罢免制度在操作上几近瘫痪,民意被制度性冷处理,政治责任几乎无法追究。 这背后,是一个更深刻的民主命题: 没有罢免权的民主,是失控的授权; 没有有效罢免机制的制度,只是表演性的政治。 一、台湾的罢免困局:现实层面的“合法无效” 案例1:陈柏惟罢免案(2021) 案例2:黄捷罢免案(2021) 案例3:钟东锦罢免案(2024) 这些案例说明:制度虽开罢免口子,实际却构建了“防罢免机制”。 二、为什么罢免制度“名存实亡”?台湾的五重制度性障碍 1. 程序复杂,门槛奇高 问题在于:制度把“罢免”变成了专业战争,普通人难以介入。 2. 政党绑架与政治极化,令罢免沦为选战延长线 罢免的本义是制度自清,却被政党当作政治互打工具。 3. 民众动员结构解体,行动力被高度分散 现代民主社会里,个体虽“自由”,但“孤立”。 4. 媒体生态异化,言论空间制造假民意 媒体不再引导公民判断,而是在协助政党定调。 5. 罢免之后,无制度性善后,导致民众恐惧动荡 民众需要的是“负责任的纠错机制”,不是混乱后的政治空转。 三、民主必须有“完整的罢免机制” 如果民主是一辆公共列车,选举是上车,罢免就是刹车。 一个没有刹车系统的民主,不是自由的制度,而是制度性失控。 ▶ 完整的罢免机制应包含五个构件: 构件 功能 台湾现状 优化建议 ① 易启动 民众能发起,无需政党支援 极高门槛 降低第一阶段门槛至0.5% ② 公正审查 联署、资格、公文全程公开 行政权审查模糊 建立跨党独立罢免委员会 ③ 非政党操控 去党化动员 政党完全主导罢免动员 限制政党使用行政资源介入罢免 […]

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