Turkey's President vowed to tighten government control over social media earlier this month after he said "dark-hearted" users insulted Finance Minister Berat Albayrak and his wife Esra, the president's daughter, following the birth of their fourth child.
And last month, the Turkish leader met with a spate of negative comments during a video-conference with young people.
The Turkish presidency then turned off comments but there were 388,000 clicks on the "thumbs down" button, compared with 114,000 on the "thumbs up" button.
Recep Erdogan is not a fan of social media despite a large following on different platforms, including Twitter.
He once compared the media platforms to a "murderer's knife" and previously promised to "eradicate" Twitter.
His government previously blocked Twitter and YouTube in 2014 after audio recordings were posted implicating the president, then prime minister, and his inner circle in an alleged corruption scandal.
Recep Tayyip Erdogan's aversion of social media also dates back to anti-government protests in 2013, which were often mobilized by Twitter and Facebook posts.
A Turkish court in January lifted a ban on the online encyclopedia Wikipedia after almost three years.
According to Twitter's latest "transparency report" for the first half of 2019, Turkey ranked number one for seeking content removal with more than 6,000 requests.
(Writer & Editor: Agence France-Presse)
Source: http://u.afp.com/38xA
Dapatkan update berita pilihan dan breaking news setiap hari dari Kompas.com. Mari bergabung di Grup Telegram "Kompas.com News Update", caranya klik link https://t.me/kompascomupdate, kemudian join. Anda harus install aplikasi Telegram terlebih dulu di ponsel.