The RADAR: When a crisis unfolds, how should companies respond?

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Demonstrators protest a network shutdown in Myanmar. Photo by Nyinyi Lwin, used with permission.

Demonstrators protest a network shutdown in Myanmar. Photo by Nyinyi Lwin, used with permission.

This is the RADAR, Ranking Digital Rights’ newsletter. This special edition was sent on March 3, 2021. Subscribe here to get The RADAR by email.

As we put the finishing touches on the 2020 RDR Index during the month of February, we kept an eye on the rapidly escalating tensions in Myanmar.

In the wake of the military coup d’etat, pro-democracy protests in Yangon have been met with military violence and a series of network shutdowns blocking journalists from reporting critical news, activists from organizing, and everyday people from communicating with family and friends when they need to most.

We also watched with intrigue as Facebook announced a decision to ban Myanmar’s military from maintaining official accounts on the platform. Was this move consistent with Facebook’s policies? More important, was this the “right” response from a human rights standpoint?

While we may not have all the answers, our indicators provide a valuable road map for companies seeking to build and maintain human rights-protective practices that are especially vital when crisis strikes.

Spotlight: How can companies protect human rights in a state of emergency?

In one of three featured essays that accompany the 2020 RDR Index, Company Engagement Lead Jan Rydzak and Senior Policy Consultant Elizabeth M. Renieris look at how companies respond—or fail to respond—when crisis strikes. Whether facing a global pandemic or a politically-driven state of emergency, many of the companies we rank have been caught flat-footed time and again. Too often, their responses result in significant consequences for the public.

In the introduction, they write:

While the digital platforms we rank were all prepared to seize the moment and profit from the circumstances created by the pandemic, all the companies were caught off guard by the impact of COVID-19 on their own users. Yet they have all weathered crises before. Telcos have raced to repair infrastructure in the wake of natural disasters. Platforms have grappled with government censorship orders in the face of political upheaval.

The way a company responds to a crisis does not just affect its bottom line. It can have profound implications for the fundamental rights of millions, if not billions, of people, whether or not they are “users” of a product or service that the company provides.

The year 2020 could not have given us a better set of case studies in just how dangerous it is for these companies to be so unprepared for the human impact of crisis.

Read their essay →

ICYMI: The 2020 RDR Index is live!

We were proud to launch our latest findings last week with a virtual event featuring leading voices in the broader movement to hold tech and telecom companies accountable to the public. Watch the replay here.

RDR Director Jessica Dheere was joined by Consumer Reports CEO Marta Tellado, The Markup President Nabiha Syed, and Marina Madale, general manager for sustainability and shared value at MTN. The group discussed our new findings, with a special focus on companies’ lack of transparency around their use of algorithms, and the question of how companies build trust among the public. Transparency, of course, was front and center.

As The Markup’s Syed put it:

“The public deserves to know exactly how technology governs their lives, and what they can do about it. You have to look at the system that perpetuates harm, not just the symptoms of it.”

We were especially grateful to have Marina Madale join us for the launch. Madale represents MTN, the South Africa-based telco that earned the coveted spot of most improved company in the 2020 RDR Index (see our MTN company report card.)

Madale told the audience:

“Engaging with the [RDR] team fundamentally helped us to understand where we’re at, what’s required….it was one of the things that led to us developing our first transparency report.”

Clockwise from top left: Jessica Dheere, Nabiha Syed, Marina Madale, Marta Tellado.

Clockwise from top left: Jessica Dheere, Nabiha Syed, Marina Madale, Marta Tellado.

WATCH: Video from our launch event

Sounding the alarm on Amazon’s failures

Since our launch, there has been a lot of talk about Amazon’s poor showing (see our Amazon company report card) in the RDR Index. While all companies technically failedTwitter earned the highest score, with just 53 out of 100 possible points—Amazon’s failure was colossal, with the company scoring only 20 out of 100 points.

As if to support our findings, Politico.eu ran a bombshell story the next day built on interviews with former employees who say the company’s security practices are bound for disaster. Among other allegations, the employees charged that Amazon fails to properly control employee access to its systems, leaving millions of customers’ data vulnerable to misuse. Our research confirms that the company publishes no information about internal security oversight—it was the only digital platform in the RDR Index that disclosed nothing in this arena.

2020 RDR Index media hits

Fast Company: In a feature on our latest findings, Rob Pegoraro put it well: “A new report on the human-rights policies of 26 tech and telecom firms around the world delivers a harsh verdict: From Alibaba to Vodafone, they all get an F.” Read more via Fast Company

Consumer Reports: CR’s Kaveh Waddell cited our research and spoke with us for an in-depth story on the secretive nature of tech companies’ development and use of algorithms. RDR Research Director Amy Brouillette explained the kinds of questions we pose in our methodology: “What are the ingredients that go into [algorithms]? How much control do users have over them?” Read more via Consumer Reports

The Wire: Our 2020 RDR Index findings on Bharti Airtel were covered in The Wire, an India-based digital news outlet. The article notes that Bharti Airtel remains among the least transparent of global telecommunications companies we rank, especially when it comes to network shutdowns. According to the New Delhi-based Software Freedom Law Centre, the government of India ordered 83 prolonged network shutdowns in 2020, more than any other country in the world. Read more via The Wire

South China Morning Post (SCMP): AlibabaBaidu, and Tencent are at the bottom of the 2020 RDR Index ranking, similar to previous years. Citing RDR Founding Director Rebecca MacKinnnon’s essay on the topic, SCMP noted that a big reason Chinese companies score poorly in the RDR Index is that they are primarily beholden to the laws and pressures of the state. Read more via South China Morning Post

Where to find us this week

MozFest: Explore RDR findings on targeted ads and algorithmic systems
March 9 at 3:15 PM EST | Register here
Join our session on what companies disclose about their targeted advertising and algorithmic systems. RDR Research Manager Veszna Wessenauer and Senior Program Manager Lisa Gutermuth will present and lead a discussion on our latest findings, and how advocates can use them to hold companies accountable for their human rights commitments.

Yale Law School and Wikimedia Initiative: Alternative Regulatory Responses to Misinformation
March 12 at 12:00 PM EST | Register here
Jan Rydzak and Elizabeth M. Renieris will discuss their new paper, Better Processes Lead to Better Outcomes, at the Yale Law School and Wikimedia Initiative on Intermediaries and Information, a co-hosted series on regulatory responses to misinformation.

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If you’re reading this, you probably know all too well how tech companies wield unprecedented power in the digital age. RDR helps hold them accountable for their obligations to protect and respect their users’ rights.

As a nonprofit initiative that receives no corporate funding, we need your support. Help us guarantee future editions of the RDR Index—and The RADAR—by making a donation. Do your part to help keep tech power in check!

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