“…Hence, the literature has focused on how authoritarian regimes used new technologies, e-participation, and Lee & Kwak, 2012;Bates, 2013;and, Gil-Garcia et al, 2020. e-government, as tools to either promote economic development and modernization (Altayar, 2018;Linde & Karlsson, 2013), or to oppress, manipulate citizens, and legitimize autocracy (Gerschewski, 2013(Gerschewski, , 2018Guriev & Treisman, 2019;Kendall-Taylor et al, 2020;Kudaibergenova, 2018;Marechal, 2017;Omelicheva, 2016;O'Connor et al, 2019). As an example of the latter, open government can be used to legitimize autocratic regimes by allowing citizens to freely express their opinions about social problems and injustices on-line while at the same time violating the human rights of those who appear to threaten the regime, described as "networked authoritarianism" (Kim et al, 2021;Li et al, 2016;MacKinnon, 2011;Maerz, 2016Maerz, , 2020Pearse & Kendzior, 2012;Tsai, 2016).…”