THE FREEDOM OF THE INTERNET IS BEING ERODED
18 May 2007
It's not just gambling that is being filtered by
politics and bureaucracy around the world - and China,
Iran and Saudi Arabia are the worst culprits
The MIT Technology Review commented this week on the
steady increase in Internet censorship (the euphemism is
"filtering") following the release of the results of the
OpenNet Initiative (ONI)
The Initiative came to the conclusion that the scale,
the scope, and the sophistication of state-based
Internet filtering have all increased dramatically in
recent years, and summarises the tools and techniques
used by countries to keep their citizens from viewing
certain kinds of online material.
ONI is a collaboration among four of the world's leading
universities: Cambridge, Oxford, Harvard, and Toronto.
The group's testing was carried out during 2006 and
early 2007. ONI used a combination of tools that can
remotely test filtering conditions within given
countries. The group also relied heavily on local
researchers who evaluated Internet conditions from
inside certain countries.
Some countries, such as Cuba and North Korea, were
deemed too dangerous for either remote or in-country
testing. But of the 41 different countries tested by
ONI, 25 were found to block or filter online content.
"Over the course of five years, we've gone from just a
few places doing state-based technical filtering, like
China, Iran, and Saudi Arabia, to more than two dozen,"
says John Palfrey, executive director of the Berkman
Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School.
"As Internet censorship and surveillance grow, there's
reason to worry about the implications of these trends
for human rights, political activism, and economic
development around the world."
But it's not just the sheer number of countries doing
content filtering that has grown; it's also the breadth
and depth of material being blocked.
The report discusses three primary rationales that
nations have for blocking Internet content. The first is
political, which leads to, for example, the blocking of
opposition-group websites. The second rationale is
social: some countries block pornography and sites
dealing with gambling or sexuality issues. The third
rationale is national security, which can lead some
nations to block online material produced by, for
example, extremist groups.
According to the report, China, Iran, and Saudi Arabia
remain the top blockers. Each nation filters not just
pornography, but also a wide range of political,
human-rights, religious, and cultural sites deemed
subversive by those countries' governments.
Other countries are more selective in what they let
citizens see or not see. Syria and Tunisia, for example,
filter a great deal of political content, while Burma
and Pakistan target websites that pertain to
national-security issues.
One interesting case is that of heavily wired South
Korea, where ONI found Internet filtering limited to one
topic: North Korea.
"The South Koreans block several North Korean websites,"
says Nart Villeneuve, director of technical research at
the Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto. "They even
tamper with the system so that when you try to access
one of those North Korean sites, the URL resolves to a
South Korean police page telling you, 'What you're
trying to access is illegal, and we know your IP
[Internet protocol] address.'"
South Korea's approach also speaks to the growing
sophistication of the filtering employed by countries.
Gone are the days when filtering one blog or one website
necessarily meant shutting down, say, all of Blogspot,
or an entire domain.
"In the early days, countries used relatively crude
blocking mechanisms at the national backbone level, or
imposed restrictions upon ISPs that were applied in
uneven ways," says Ronald Deibert, director of the
Citizen Lab. "Now we see first and foremost that many
countries are using commercial filtering technologies,
most of which are made by U.S. companies. That's
providing them with a finer-grain level of service."
Deibert also notes that ONI found evidence that
filtering has moved beyond websites and into
applications. Some nations now block access to programs
such as Google Maps and the voice-over-Internet
application Skype. Thailand recently blocked access to
the video-upload site YouTube.
But most pernicious, Deibert says, is something he calls
"event-based" filtering, of which Belarus provides an
interesting example. Before the elections in March of
2006, Deibert notes, Belarus wasn't blocking Internet
content by technical means. Instead, the country's
strict laws regarding online content kept many
Belarusians critical of the government in check.
Then, at the time of key moments in the election, ONI
realized that opposition websites were suddenly
inaccessible inside the country. This led Deibert to
believe that for just this brief period of time, laws
designed to promote self-censorship weren't enough. The
government had indeed started blocking content.
"This is a harbinger of what's to come worldwide,"
Deibert says. "You'll have filtering just during
critical times, such as elections. Countries realize
they risk becoming pariahs, and so they'll find more
surreptitious ways of filtering."
Cambodia recently took this kind of censorship beyond
the confines of the computer, when it ordered that
cell-phone text-messaging services be cut off during
elections. ONI is already thinking of ways to
incorporate this kind of filtering into future studies.
"We're going to have to keep an eye not just on the
network, but on the endpoint," says Jonathan Zittrain,
professor of Internet governance and regulation at
Oxford University, "because the device you use and how
it works, whether it's a computer or, say, a Blackberry,
will have a huge impact on what you can do or not do on
the Net, and how easily you can be monitored."
Online Casino News courtesy of
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