A formal judgement has approved the administrative measure, indicating that a permanent restriction is now in place for all language editions of the online encyclopedia in Turkey.
Some are pointing towards Wikipedia's depiction of Erdogan as a dictator as a cause:
"Erdoğan detractors have noted that under Erdoğan, more journalists have been incarcerated in Turkey than in any other country, including North Korea. Detractors have also pointed out the fact that the April referendum essentially nullified the traditional legal 'check' of parliamentary fiscal review, that parliament had previously held over his executive branch of government. Detractors have claimed that Erdoğan's unceasing efforts at broadening his executive powers while also minimizing his executive accountability may amount to the 'fall of Turkish democracy,' and the 'birth of a dictator.'
"The loss of availability is consistent with internet filters used to censor content in the country," according to independent, non-partisan network monitoring observatory Turkey Blocks.
"SSL errors are issued for https requests, indicating failing to connect to the authentic servers, while the unencrypted addresses now return an nginx http 404 error indicative of filtering."
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