Nearly 70% (n=160) of respondents reported self-censoring online for fear of the law. Frequency of exposure to blocked content was a statistically significant, ordered predictor of self-censorship (Goodman-Kruskal's gamma = 0.421, 95% CI [0.247, 0.595], p < 0.05), with self-censorship increasing monotonically as exposure to blocked content increased. Notably, self-censorship rates did not differ significantly between respondents inside and outside Thailand, suggesting the chilling effect extends beyond the reach of domestic ISP-level blocking.
From 2017-gebhart-internet — Internet Censorship in Thailand: User Practices and Potential Threats
· §5.5.1
· 2017
· European Symposium on Security \& Privacy
Implications
Reducing visible censorship events (e.g., through transparent proxying or pre-emptive rerouting that eliminates block pages) may directly reduce the chilling-effect feedback loop, independent of whether users are attempting to access sensitive content.
Circumvention tools should treat self-censorship reduction as a measurable outcome alongside access metrics, since chilling effects persist even among users who successfully bypass blocks.