Press freedom group creates library for censored articles in video game Minecraft

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HONG KONG • A virtual library housing censored articles from around the world has been created within the popular video game Minecraft by press freedom group Reporters Without Borders (RSF).
Minecraft, with its signature pixellated graphics, enables players to build entire universes from Lego-like digital blocks, either alone or with others online.
RSF said it had put work by banned, exiled or killed journalists from five countries - Egypt, Mexico, Saudi Arabia, Russia and Vietnam - on an open server, making it available for players to view despite local censorship laws.
"In these countries, where websites, blogs and free press in general are strictly limited, Minecraft is still accessible by everyone," the group said in a press release.
"These articles are now available again within Minecraft, hidden from government surveillance technology inside a computer game. The books can be read by everyone on the server, but their content cannot be changed," it said.
In May last year, Microsoft, which acquired Minecraft in 2014, said 176 million copies of the game had been sold since it was launched a decade ago.
The project, announced last Thursday to mark World Day Against Cyber Censorship, is called "Uncensored Library" and takes the form of a large neoclassical-style building in the game.
RSF said the library is growing, with more texts being added both in English and their original languages.
  • 176m

Number of copies of popular video game Minecraft that had been sold as of May last year, since it was launched a decade ago.
Already available in the game are articles by slain Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi and from Egyptian online newspaper Mada Masr, which has been blocked in the North African country since 2017.
AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE
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