Internet Censorship In Saudi Arabia 8
An Anonymous Coward writes: "It's good to see long-established cultures are fighting back against the global monoculture. It seems that censorship of the Internet is a practical proposition for governments that care sufficiently about the 'moral welfare' of their citizens. It is possible that Slashdot is censored due to the high levels of profanity encountered. Interestingly enough, they have hired Europeans to do the censoring for them. The BBC has this report, Saudi Arabian authorities succeed in censoring the Internet."
The official government censor says: "the conservative and religious culture of the Saudi people means they want to be sure that if they log onto the net they will not be offended." I'm sure that's true for many people; the rest have been buying satellite dishes by the truckload to watch authorized TV.
More information (Score:1)
I am a Muslim, an Arab, and a resident of Saudi Arabia for the last 11 years.
I have built an extensive web site that describes how the internet is setup, list of all the Saudi ISPs, comparison of prices, service issues, internet cafes, ...etc.
You can check the Saudi ISPs site [2bits.com] for all the details. The Internet Setup in Saudi Arabia page [2bits.com] will give you an idea on the setup.
Slashdot [slashdot.org] is not blocked in Saudi Arabia. However, some links (related to hacking and porn, specially when CmdrTaco does the Quickies) are blocked.
Prior to the internet becoming available to the public (January 1999), there have been rumors that Saudi Arabia will allow access to the internet thru a "White List", meaning that only those sites that are explicitly allowed can be accessed. This turned out to be just a rumor. Only those sites that are explicitly blocked are unaccessible.
I am told that sites are blocked not by an employee seeing that it is inappropriate, but there is an approval process in place (he has to go to higher levels of authority and get approval).
Anyone can recommend a site for blocking or request the unblocking of a site (the links are on the site mentioned above.
My main gripes about the internet in Saudi Arabia are:
It is very expensive compared to neighboring countries, even those with a comparable (see the Arabs vs. West page [2bits.com] on the above site.
There is overload on the infrastructure. Proxies just make things slower than they should be. Compared to internet access in (say) Alexandria, Egypt, my home town. Access in Saudi Arabia is slow! Check Speed [2bits.com] and Service Watch [2bits.com] pages.
In reality, I have not found this censorship to be bothersome.
You should also consider that there are tons of backdoors available for those who are keen to access something that is blocked.
When an Automatic English to Arabic translation service (Tarjim [tarjim.com]) was made available two months ago, kiddies started to use it as a back door to access pron. The result: it was blocked! (Note to Arabs: The translation isn't any good. Just try it on your own site and sit back and laugh. Bablefish [altavista.com] is ages ahead of it!)
The growth of the internet in Saudi Arabia is explosive. Check the Middle East Internet Statistics [2bits.com] site for details.
You should also consider that The United Arab Emirates also blocks porn from the net. So does Singapore.
To its credit, Saudi Arabia doesn't block any Voice over IP services (Net2Phone, MediaRing, Dialpad, Yahoo Voice Chat, ...etc.), unlike most of the Gulf countries (Kuwait, Qatar, UAE) and even Lebanon, where the Telecom monopolies are afraid of loss of revenue.
This too shall pass (Score:1)
In the case of the Saudis, the Chinese and others, censorship of information is how these governments maintain control of their populations. We do it here in the US by churning out smokescreens to distract the electorate from the real issues. Things like Monica's War and gun control.
This will pass. As information becomes freely available to anyone who cares to look for it, people will no longer be restricted to a single point of view. You can look forward to a certain amount of havoc and economic chaos as the Internet changes the way we work and live. Take advantage of it if you can. This is only the beginning.
--
Nobody asked - just my opinion.
-gatebanger
Gear Internet Content Management Software (Score:1)
The company that made it possible (Score:1)
For me this is a reminder that not all tree-hugging open-the-goddamn-source people are fanatically against censorship, and that might be good. I guess no Slashdotter actually believes that they can really censor the Internet, and I am sure that as the volume keeps increasing, more and more material critical to the Saudi religious dictatorship gets through.
But I still doubt if it was the primary intention of Nixu Oy people in the first place - Saudi Arabia is rich with oil money anyway...
Look, but don't look. (Score:1)
Though I do find it slightly ironic that they're blocking sites with bomb-making information. Allah forbid that some radical Shiites would learn how to build bombs, imagine what they might do!
PS. Apologies to any Moslem
Hey wait a minute .. (Score:1)
Religion shouldn't be part of gov't (Score:2)
I know the Koran is supposed to tell you how to live etc, but I barely go by some of the stricter portions of it. In other words, censorship is sure to come if the country has religious laws and religion as its base.
If people want to break their religions and go to hell, I think they should be allowed to. If they want to be an "honest, faithful" person, let them do that too. Just don't force it upon an entire population.
Religous B.S. (Score:1)