Introduction

This guide is a tool for you, the Internet user, to learn about your human rights online, their possible limitations, and available remedies for such limitations. Human rights and fundamental freedoms apply equally offline and online. This principle includes respect for the rights and freedoms of other Internet users. The guide provides you with information about what rights and freedoms mean in practice in the context of the Internet, how they can be relied and acted upon, as well as how to access remedies. It is an evolving document, open to periodic updating.

The Human Rights Guide for Internet Users exist in English, French, Albanian, Arabic, Bulgarian, Dutch, German, Greek, Italian, Portuguese, Russian, Serbian, Spanish, Turkish, Ukrainian

This guide is based on the European Convention on Human Rights and other Council of Europe conventions and instruments that deal with various aspects of human rights protection. All Council of Europe member States have a duty to respect, protect and fulfil the rights and freedoms contained in the instruments that they have ratified. The guide is also inspired by the continuous interpretation of these rights and freedoms by the European Court of Human Rights and by other relevant legal instruments of the Council of Europe.

The guide does not establish new human rights and fundamental freedoms. It builds on existing human rights standards and enforcement mechanisms.

Read the full text of Recommendation and Explanatory Memorandum.