Top 10 List of Worldwide Internet Censors 115
PreacherTom writes "Reports of internet censorship are nothing new and are quite expected from countries whose leadership depends on controlling the popular worldview. Reporters Without Borders, a Paris group that does advocacy work for press freedom, puts a number to the trend with a list of the countries that it says go the furthest to censor the Internet. Photos document the worldwide protests and continuing struggles. Not surprisingly, China is described as the pioneer of internet censors, dedicating more resources than any other country to restrict online freedoms." This week we also discussed the Reporters Without Borders' 13 Enemies of the Internet list.
Summary (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Summary (Score:4, Funny)
Star wars wisdom (Score:1)
As Han Solo said to Lea in the Return of the Jedi, "a backdoor sounds like a great idea"
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Suspicion (Score:3, Interesting)
Still, it's a great reminder that democracy and free speech are not things that you can take for granted. Given another decade or two of passivity on the part of American voters*, and the USA could wind up taking a place on lists like that. On the other hand, if Americans were to start taking ideas like liberty seriously, they coul
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Just so long as the libertarian's don't win, sure. Trendy conservatism packaged as progressive, there's two reasons people espouse libertarianism- They want to fully hand over power to the leading corporations of the day or they're emo hipsters in their 30's.
A List of Fallacious assertions you just made (Score:3, Informative)
Straw Man Argument - You seek to align Libertarian with Emo Hipsters in an attempt to make them look retarded
False Dichotomy - You state that people who espouse libertarianism are either in bed with the corporations of the day or are emo hipsters. The reality of the situation is much more diverse in nature then you let on
Hopefully you will learn that
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Still, they're far closer to being genuinely conservative than any party in A
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Remember to cap the L when referring to the party. There's only one word unlike conservative/Republican and liberal/Democrat.
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Which party? Did I miss something? Or did you mean Libertarian Party (like in Republican Party)?
CC.
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The only reason I was worried about it was due to possible anti-American bias, you know the same kind of crap where you get reports that the U.S. is one of the top producers of torture impliments in the world (never mind that those things are wire cables, rubber hoses, car batteries, things like that...), and not due to any real Free
Greens (Score:2)
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You misspelled "realistic". See, we live in a two-party system, thanks to Duverger's law [wikipedia.org]. Voting for a third party is more likely to hurt your interests than help them, unless you can convince a plurality to vote with you, and so far the Greens and Libertarians have failed to do that. The alternative is to vote for a major party and work within it to shape it into
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What if you are green AND libertarian?
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Re:Summary (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Summary (Score:4, Informative)
Technically we have a dupe here, the article [businessweek.com] is actually totally based on the Reporters without borders press release [rsf.org] we discussed [slashdot.org] a few days ago. The list of enemies is also identical with the list of censors:
Belarus, Burma, China, Cuba, Egypt, Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Tunisia, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Vietnam (Only Burma is called Myanmar.)
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Do you want to know what they [slashdot.org] are?
Thirteen Countries, not Ten. (Score:3, Informative)
Did anybody (Editors/Submitter) RTFA? I mean the first line of the article is:
Some simple math, 1 = China, 2 = Myanmar, 3 = Belarus . . . and then add another 10 . . . That gives you 13, well at least around here it does.
It's 5 countries ! (Score:2)
Re:Thirteen Countries, not Ten. (Score:5, Funny)
Don't mix your abstractions, the headline says "Top 10," not "Top Ten."
Base 13, dude. Base 13
I must be serious, because nobody makes jokes in base 13.
KFG
What do you get (Score:1)
42.
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KFG
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You mean Base thirteen.
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"Base 13, dude. Base thirteen."
But I ultimately decided, in the interest of safety, not to go for the strange loopy metametajoke. They tend to be explosively unstable.
KFG
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There is a great disturbance in the force.... as if all over the globe, people are taking off their left shoe, and dropping it with a thunk!
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Just so long as what they thunk was "Don't Panic!"
Now if you'll excuse me, I'm going to go off in a minute and a huff, but how irrelevant got into my pajamas, I'll never know.
KFG
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Another X prize (Score:2)
I suggest a multi-thousand dollar prize for the first hacker who can open up their servers so the N.K. citizens can see the whole web.
Re:Another X prize (Score:5, Insightful)
Owning a tunable radio receiver (as opposed to the one with only the DearLeader presets) is a crime in North Korea. Computers/internet access, as nice as that sounds, just isn't an option.
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Is it still illegal then?
I can imagine it now. Instead of smuggling illicit items accross the border, they will start smuggling capacitors.
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Most of the citizens of NK actually believe in what their government is doing.
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Probably yes.
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Re:Another X prize (Score:5, Insightful)
I can't say there is much to recommend it. It is likely that there would be no meaningful payoff that would last more than minutes. Even if you were successful in creating temporary access to a wider range of internet sites, it is likely that the few North Koreas who use the web would be too terrified to make use of it, assuming they even knew about it. Given the nature of the regime, you can assume that their secret police record, monitor, review, and act on the traffic in ways that far exceed the most lurid fantasies about the NSA. Surfing unauthorized web sites would likely constitute a punishable act, especially if an unauthorized site was visited that contained unvetted political, economic, or religious [nysun.com] information. If you've stepped over the line in North Korea, you could easily fall prey to the "heredity rule", developed the Dear Leader's father. Under that rule, the North Korean secret police arrest and imprison three generations of a family [signonsandiego.com] for the misdeeds of one of them, often for life, which can be short in a North Korean "prison camp" AKA death camp.
Besides, the international incident with the paranoid, now nuclear armed, barbaric [guardian.co.uk] regime which is starving [timesonline.co.uk] its people wouldn't be worth it.
If anyone still insists on it, I suggest you stay away from at least the Koreas and Japan as North Korea has a long history of kidnapping people from those countries for various reasons. Given their ties to organized crime, due to their many criminal enterprises [heritage.org], they could reach even further. Life there is tough even when you are useful to them [cbsnews.com].
China has the most???? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:China has the most???? (Score:4, Insightful)
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This is because US Telco carriers charge firstly to connect to US networks and secondly for data transmitted in both directions
I recall reading about one African country (I don't think it was South Africa) which had it's internet completly disconnected due to failure to pay access charges
South Africa's reasons (and I suspect some of the other poorer countries on the list) is purly financial.
I would like to say... (Score:1)
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I mean, seriously, why the fuck... *HAVEN'T THEY BEEN GIVEN MEDALS YET?*... I was surprised they weren't on the list... *OF SEXIEST POLITICIANS EVER.*
You know what? The government can go suck... *A DELICIOUS LOLLIPOP BECAUSE THEY CERTAINLY DESERVED IT. VOTE INCUMBENT! GOD BLESS AMERICA!*
(Note: This comment is a joke. As much as I hate some of the things America does on the Internet [and off it, but let's not get into that(Y
China #1??? (Score:2)
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What's more, we really do have outages that shut off access to large swaths of the foreign internet for a couple of minutes/hours/days.
Sometimes I have to fire up TOR to tell the difference between censorship and a plain old DNS problem or server failure.
No question that the government stooge in question was either a liar or a fool, but it is at least plausible to me that he just didn't know any better. He woul
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Dupes these days, they're getting harder spot! (Score:1)
Last line of summary: "This week we also discussed the Reporters Without Borders' 13 Enemies of the Internet list."
The dupes are getting harder and harder to spot! This is just BusinessWeek's spin on it, isn't it interesting how news changes?
Duplicate! (Score:2)
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/11/07/1
I'll come back next week and point it out again.
Top 10 List of Worldwide Internet Censors (Score:2)
Drat! Foiled again!
Or does this mean Slashdot is on the list?
Behind the Great Wall (Score:5, Informative)
For 99.99% or the people here, we are free to go about our business. As long as you are not advocating the overthrow of the government or engaging in illegal activities you aren't going to have too many problems here. (disclaimer: business where there is a lot of money at stake are another matter) I need not remind you how the laws have been changing in the US for anyone implicated in overthrowing the US government. Try going to websites that advocate the overthrow of the US government and have bomb making instructions. Better yet, set one up inside the US and see how long it is till you get censored. See if the two governments are really all the different. Governments defend themselves. You might not agree with the ways they do it, but they do it nonetheless. And of course the US government has NEVER tried to cover anything bad they they did up...
I'm not implying that I'm a big supporter of the Chinese government. There are a lot of things they need to improve on and change. The list is very long. However, the Chinese government is making massive improvements every year and should be given credit for doing so.
I write this b/c I think there is a tremendous amount of misunderstanding in the US of what it is really like to live in China.
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Re:Behind the Great Wall (Score:5, Informative)
www.wikipedia.org (do a wikipedia search on tiananmen massacre and then see what happend)
news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/4960762.st
www.blogspot.com
Oh here's an interesting tidbit of knowledge for you slashdoters. Accessing most Western websites from China is blasted slow. But running bittorrent is just as fast as if I was back home. (For some reason I recently started to be able to stream youtube videos, haven't quite figure that one out)
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It sure is annoying when the website you use most often is blocked. Fortunately, there are proxies, and the searchmash.com site mentioned earlier on
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US=BAD
Everyone Else=Good
Once you learn to accept that, everything will go a lot smoother
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I say "relatively" as news programs are generally biased in some way, but it's a start, eh?
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(of course, I agree with you - people generally have the worse misconceptions about foreigners)
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I was in Beijing from October 14-23 at an international (read: U.N.) conference hosted by China at the Beijing International Conference Center, not far from where the Olympics will be in 2 years.
While American press web sites were pretty readily accessible, the BBC rather pointedly was not. (I'm American, but I like some diversity in my news.)
Also, when it came time to upload some coverage of the last day of the conference to a web site in Can [www.iisd.ca]
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No, it's because THIS WEBSITE IS IN ENGLISH. Duh! You think the Chinese censors give a shit about what overseas websites talk about in their native languages? Hint: No. Try zonaeuropa.com sometime.
I write this b/c I think there is a tremendous amount of misunderstanding in the US of what it is really like to live in China.
Yeah, because you're the f
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Noah's won't take cash? I'm not a breakfast person, but I might have to try that, just to see whether your second claim has any validity at all. (I'm not doing 7 AM, though. I don't do mornings.)
Well, this shows what is wrong with voting (Score:2, Insightful)
How does this then compare to China wich allows most of its citizens access except to certain sites.
The first is a dictator's wetdream, you, the ruler in total control of all the information. The second is just trying to put out the fire in a vulcano with a spoon.
The
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They forgot Denmark (Score:5, Interesting)
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I'm not familiar with the case, but wouldn't the court have decided that Tele2 could block access to the AllOfMp3 site, rather than should block access?
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The worst part is that it is trivial to break (certain sites return a fake ip) so it does nothing, but look nice.
list composition (Score:2, Interesting)
6+4+3=13
6 Muslim countries (Iran, Tunisia, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Turkmenistan, Syria), 4 communist countries (China, North Korea, Cuba, Vietnam), 3 dicatorships (Myanmar, Belarus, Uzbekistan).
While I am not sure about Uzbekistan, I feel pretty safe about the classification. Countries classified as muslim/communist probably can be tagged as dictatorships too (or as undemocratic to say the least).
So it can be safely said that internet censors are those with ideologies that are/were opp
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I'm saying this from Qatar where even sites that insult governments and respected people every hour on the hour are not censored (even though they have been targeting Qatar government for a lot of time lately), but sites like Newgrounds.com are censored because of porn.
DAMN YOU PERVERTS, give us newgrounds back!!
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While I don't think it is the work of a government to protect me from pornography, TFA speaks about censoring political opposition and bloggers. And yes, censoring governments usually justify their censorship as a way to protect the people from obscene contents, while actually silencing legitimate political discussions.
Re:list composition (Score:4, Interesting)
You might consider it inflamatory that he pointed it out (someone did), but that doesn't make it any less true, and it's certainly (IMO) an interesting point. As a previous poster pointed out, there's a lot of overlap with these countries and those that would like to wrest control of the internet away from the U.S.
One thing that does bother me is that pre-war Iraq probably wouldn't have been on this list, and yet we still have economic and political relations with China, Saudi Arabia, and a lot of other countries that we ought not be dealing with. This goes beyond and political divisiveness; both parties cow-tow to the nations that are precieved to bring us economic gain as if that's more important than human rights.
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Although there are elements of truth to what you have to say, the stark manner in which you have presented it will cause the Slashdot mainstream to vilify you and force you to wear a polka dot hat.
Let us hope that the Commander Tacoyev reforms of 2007 are accepted. Then, Slashdot will be as civilized as any other blog and:
- You will no longer be forced to wear polka dot hat.
- I can continue to drink fermented barley water
- Pretty girls riding the bus can ask sit on my lap
Goodbye! Dzienkuje!
Also... (Score:2)
Yeah right up there on my 2-do list (Score:2)
Internet Freedom Test (Score:3, Interesting)
<Name of my national leader> is a drooling idiot
If shortly thereafter, we never hear from you again, your nation does not enjoy freedom on the Internet. Judging from posts to Slashdot, the US enjoys truly extraordinary freedom.
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i said this before (Score:2)
Government should be delegated a right to censor Internet the same way the censor any public media: television, radio, newspapers by various means.
There is nothing new about and nothing to worry. You have to worry WHO you elect to the government.
Censorship is just a tool. You can use it bad way or good way depending on the person using it.
Same concerns all social institutions.
Grow up.
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Politicians are voted in and out of office depending on the information the voters possess. If you give politicians unrestricted access to censor the information the voters receive, the democratic process collapses. Voters cannot make informed choices if their c
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All the lists comparing different aspects "human rights" in different countries are just plain vanilla idiotic imperialistic propaganda machines for one simple reason: peopple of different cou
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Nonsense. Utter rubbish. How do you define a country? It's just a grouping of people and property through a set of constructed constraints. Saying "People of different countries have different notions of 'human rights'" is the same thing as saying, "People have different
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It is not moral relativism, because I have my moral and I am living by it, but when there is a whole country with a different moral, I do not interfere. Let the history decide.
". But if you believed that, then you'd have no problem with powerful countries trying to force their notion of human rights on other countries." Do not put your words in
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Just self-identification? That's an unusually generous criteria. By that logic, anyone individual who considered themselves to be independent of their native land could claim to be a sovereign country.
I'm also curious about your non-interventionist policy. You claim Tibet is a separate country, yet it is controlled by China. Should we interfere and liberate Tibet? And if not, does tha
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"Should we interfere and liberate Tibet? " No. YOU, personally, as American, exhausted your interference quota up to 1000 years ahead.
"would you consider them a sovereign country". Sure.
"What population does the country have to have? A million? " It is not defined by population size. It is defined by willingness of people to die for the independence. For e
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Why? Also, what about countries that were founded from a mix of ethnicities, such as the US? And what about countries that would collapse if not for the food aid they get, such as North Korea?
What makes you think I am an American?
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So long.
North Korea?? (Score:2)
Privatized Censorship? (Score:2)
China is the LEAST censored (Score:2)
Related Story (Score:2)
"Some 17,000 attendees of the protest voted for the nation they believed is most in need of greater Internet freedom, and China came in second, with 4,100 votes. Myanmar, under the militaristic regime of the Junta party, was believed by 4,500 participants to present its citizens with the greatest threat to freedom of press on the Internet. The remaining nations, in descending order of votes received, were Belarus, Iran, Tunisia, Cuba, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Turkmenistan, Vietnam, North Korea, Syria, and Uzbek
Major hole in story ... (Score:2)
Not even close. Back around 1990, when the commercial world was first discovering that new interweb thing, lots of local ISPs (and a few big ones) were forming rapidly in North America and Europe. Right off, there were widespread reports of ISPs that blocked or seriously interfered with their customers' attempts to access competitors' web sites.
China is now doing the same sort of thing, where "competitor" is meant partly in a political sense. But
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Er, the first web site in the world wasn't even up until late summer 1991. Well into 1992, practically every web site or home page in existence was documented and linked to by Berners-Lee on his. There weren't many. NCSA Mosaic wasn't released until 1993.
You're right in part about Europe, in that EUNET was using Internet protocols