Social media shutdowns fall by nearly 50% in the first half of 2021

As 2021 started off hopeful to improve the global situation, it also surprisingly delivered on the censorship front. Compared to the latter part of 2020, global social media shutdowns have nearly halved in the first part of 2021.

Social media censorship 2020 vs. 2021

The second half of 2020 was a rough period for digital freedom – it recorded 18 internet and social media censorship cases. In contrast, only ten were recorded in the first half of 2021.

Percentage-wise, however, Africa remains the most censorship-intensive region in the world. Nine out of the eighteen 2020 ban cases happened in Africa. And while the total cases have nearly halved in the first half of 2021, 5 out of 10 happened in the African region (Uganda, Chad, Senegal, the Republic of Congo, and Nigeria).

If we dive deeper into each individual case, we see that all five social media shutdowns happened for political reasons:

Country
Cause of disruption
UgandaUganda
General election
ChadChad
Standoff at opposition candidate’s house
SenegalSenegal
Political unrest
Republic of CongoRepublic of Congo
Election day
NigeriaNigeria
Twitter deleted the Nigerian President’s tweet

The remaining five global social media shutdowns happened due to political unrest – opposition protests in Russia, anti-government protests in Colombia, anti-Modi protests in Bangladesh, political turmoil and alleged coup attempt in Armenia, and Military uprisings in Myanmar.

Country
Cause of disruption
RussiaRussia
Opposition protests
ColombiaColombia
Anti-government protests
BangladeshBangladesh
Anti-Modi protests
MyanmarMyanmar
Military uprising
ArmeniaArmenia
Political turmoil and alleged coup attempt

People turn to privacy tools amid censorship 

Amid the 2021 social media restrictions, we see a sharp rise in Surfshark visitors and new users from affected countries. In particular, three cases have stood out in Africa:

Country
Increase in sales
A surge in visitors
NigeriaNigeria
262.07%
316.28%
SenegalSenegal
950.00%
1600.30%
UgandaUganda
1486.67%
1339.71%

The percentages show an increase in VPN sales and Surfshark website visitors on the day of the social ban against a two-week average.

This indicates that such bans affect people’s rights to freedom of speech and that they are looking for means to fight them. What’s most concerning is that these restrictions are coming from organized government bodies. This leaves people to seek out privacy tools that can give them back their freedom of expression.

You will find full research material here.