“The bathroom bill distracts from the real challenges we face and would result in terrible economic consequences — on talent, on tourism, on investment, on growth, and on small businesses,”
US: Mormon Professor Says She Was Fired for Pro-LGBTQ Facebook Post
India: Right to privacy can’t be absolute, may be regulated: Supreme Court
US: CEOs from AT&T, American Airlines, TI and BNSF join the chorus against a ‘bathroom bill’
China: Chinese gay video ban sparks online backlash
Russia: Russian-Based Startup Commits to Disrupt LGBT Space Via Partner APP
UK: My Pride Story: I’ve been at my firm 17 years – trainees are much more open now
China: Bloggers, Filmmakers Feel Chill of Internet Crackdown
The rules, which affect social media giants like Weibo Corp as well as small platforms that have thrived in China's buzzing creative online space, are the latest step toughening oversight ahead of the Communist Party Congress later this year, when President Xi Jinping is expected to consolidate power.
UK: My Pride Story: LGBT students must ask firms the challenging questions
China: Communist Youth League: “Being Gay is No Disorder!”
Since Chinese online regulators listed homosexuality as an “abnormal sexual behavior,” discussions about gay rights and emancipation have been dominating Weibo. Now, for the first time this week, a branch of the Communist Youth League has spoken out on Weibo in support of China’s LGBT community.
Over the past few days, discussions about homosexuality are all over Chinese social media. On Friday, the China Netcasting Services Association (CNSA, 中国网络视听节目服务协会) issued new criteria to strengthen regulations over online audio-visual content on Chinese platforms. One of the new regulations regarded the removal of online content that “displays homosexuality” (“展示同性恋等内容”), grouping homosexuality together with incest and sexual perversity as an “abnormal sexual behavior.” Read more via Whats On Weibo