Internet Blackout in Myanmar Stalls Citizen Report 185
StonyandCher writes "The government in Myanmar has reportedly cut off Internet access in the troubled country.
The loss of Internet access in Myanmar has slowed the tide of photos and videos shared with the rest of the world but people outside of the troubled country continue to use new media sites and other technologies to protest military activity in the Southeast Asia country."
Site with TFA is loaded with flash (Score:4, Informative)
This, my friends.... (Score:5, Interesting)
You don't want to put all of your communication eggs in one government-controlled basket.
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Re:This, my friends.... (Score:5, Insightful)
is exactly why you don't want to destroy the utility of the HF radio spectrum to sell it to broadband-over-power-line Internet providers.
Right. Because we all know an oppressive government that's willing and able to cut off internet access to an entire country won't be able to send a couple soldiers to gun down the guy down the street blasting HF in his ham shack.
I think violating government spectrum policy would be the last thing such a person would be worried about.
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Oh and in a country like Burma (aka Myanmar), violating government spectrum policy probably comes with penalty of death for you any anyone nearby the equipment.
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And we are right.
HF radio communication can be done with a few pounds of equipment in a car. It can be concealed by short, transmit-and-skedaddle operations, and even better by using spread spectrum, and with the right atmospheric conditions it can reach around the world with no infrast
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From my understanding owning a non-approved two way communication device is illegal in Burma (much like North Korea). You might be able to smuggle one in, but you'll probably be shot fairly quick if they find it.
Re:This, my friends.... (Score:4, Insightful)
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Ah, well ... (Score:1)
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http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1149/ [ietf.org]
http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2549/ [ietf.org]
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Reference RFC 1149 [faqs.org] for all the data currently available....
Re:Ah, well ... (Score:5, Funny)
Now I'm no birdkeeper, but have you ever tried to gzip a pigeon before?
Re:Ah, well ... (Score:5, Funny)
Compressing a pigeon is not difficult (though a little messy), it's decompressing it that I can't quite figure out.
Obligatory RFC reference. (Score:2)
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It's probably much easier to gzip a pidgin [pidgin.im].
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Umm... only question: Why so late? (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, maybe their astrologer said they should wait 2 more weeks 'cause then the stars are aligned or something.
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I don't think your average autocratic police state is that tech-savvy - Burma is run by peope whose expertise lies more in the area of killing and torture.
It may simply have not occurred to them to do this
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Here is a YouTube clip [youtube.com] from a 1995 program called "The Internet Show" about the 1991 Soviet coup attempt [wikipedia.org], and the role the early Internet had as an information source.
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I'm almost certainly further left than you, and I don't support killing of peaceful protesters and reporters trying to tell people about peaceful protesters.
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Yeah, those monks come from the most caste driven culture in the world, where someone born in the lowest castes are forced to remain there forever
What in the hell are you talking about?
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If you knew ANYTHING about the societies which were (they aren't now) run on a system of caste organisation, you would know that the monkhood is open to everyone.
In India, in all Indic-influenced countries, one of the things that a monk undergoes is the renunciation of his ties with the world, including his birth, his caste, and his society. He is a free spirit. There is a saying, "Never seek the source of a sannyas
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This basically means that once a person is a renunciate, that's it, you don't bother what he was before his new life, the old self is dead.
Except that his skin color still determines how he will be treated. So the caste system still applies to him, especially if his skin is very dark.
This is oversimplified despite a kernel of truth. Some brahmins have fairly dark skin; other cues are used to indicate caste. India is a vast population with unbelievable variety. Please don't equate US and euro oppression with India's.
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Maybe there is some way a communications satellites could boost the signal so that ordinary mobile phones could be turned into satellite phones?
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No, that won't make it possible for mobile phones to transmit with the strength necessary to reach orbit, or to cope with the signal delay.
One interesting tidbit: On the Thai side of the very porous Burmese border, you can go into any 7-Eleven and buy an AIS One-2-Call SIM card for as little as 50 baht (about US$1.50). AIS often run cheap deals [one-2-call.com] where you can get
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Maybe there is some way a communications satellites could boost the signal so that ordinary mobile phones could be turned into satellite phones?
The biggest problem with this idea is the doppler. Mobile phones are very bad at coping with doppler; if you are in a high speed train then you will have problems communicating with a tower that isn't perpendicular to your direction of travel. A satellite in a low enough orbit for a mobile phone to reach it would have to be moving very fast in terms of ground speed, which would be likely to cause problems. It might be possible to use a cell repeater in a spy plane, if you could persuade the USAF to lend
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Control=Cut off information (Score:3, Informative)
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Not at all. Seems obviously typical for something college students (90% of facebook) to do.
Satellite access a possibility? (Score:4, Interesting)
Modems? (Score:2)
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They can cut off international phonecalls just as quickly as they did Internet.
Aside from that, the cost of international phonecalls effectively cuts off all but the richest people over there, and those rich people tend to be part of the regime and have no interest in bringing it down.
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But, they do charge international telco's for the privilege of routing calls into the country. And, i'm sure they have someone to monitor each call (their international line capacity isnt that high and wages are low, so its easily feasible).
Also the line quality is very poor, a modem connection would be very unstable and slow.
Morse? (Score:5, Interesting)
Losing the connection to Burma slightly, the Romans employed four flags on poles to communicate messages up and down Hadrian's Wall. In ideal conditions they could get a 4-bit message from one end to the other (70-something miles) in a matter of seconds - that's a pretty good bitrate for something with no electricity behind it. Granted you can't get streaming video of monks being beaten up at that kind of bandwidth but radio's a different story.
And setting up mobile radio stations is probably easier than installing a massive communications line of wooden poles without the military noticing. Many brave individuals carefully concealed both receivers and transmitters throughout occupied Europe often at great personal risk, for example. Communications routed around damage even back then. I'm sure there are people within that country right now beaming data out. I wonder where messages in bottles cast out on their beaches would wash ashore. You could squeeze quite a bit of memory into a bottle.
Anyway, I think what I'm rambling about is that there's always a way. I just hope there are enough people with the balls out there taking these risks and, much more importantly, I hope that their messages do not fall on deaf ears. Sadly I feel some of the more powerful countries, who might otherwise be in a position to levy some immense pressure on the Burmese junta, are somewhat under-staffed at the moment. Although it's fair to say that some other countries - that are most definitely not under-staffed - remain on the outside of this affair for rather more cryptic and apparently self-serving reasons.
All said with humble and awkward apologies for commenting on the topic while enjoying a comfortable yet-to-be-oppressed privileged lifestyle.
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I don't have any experience of what internet access is like in Burma, but in Cambodia it's expensive even before you take into account the average wage and satelli
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I doubt the Burmese government cares much about us seeing the pictures, they want their own people to be not sure what is going on. They do not, for example, want people in other cities seeing the protests in Rangoon, and starting their own.
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please... (Score:5, Informative)
Also, I don't get the anti-bush tag, he seems to be doing a lot more than most to help the situation...
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That's the name which signifies that you don't accept the legitimacy of the murders who have stolen the country and ruled over it for all these years.
Bah. Countries are as countries do. If you have the ability to act like a government, you're a government. It's pointless and counter-productive to play some dumb name game where you close your eyes and pretend reality isn't reality.
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A wave of strikes and protests that started from the oilfields of central Burma in 1938 became a general strike with far-reaching consequences. In Rangoon student protesters, after successfully picketing the Secretariat, the seat of the colonial government, were charged by the British mounted police wielding batons and killing a Rangoon University student called Aung Kyaw. In Mandalay, the police shot into a crowd of protesters led by Buddhist monks killing 17 people. The movement became known as Htaung thoun ya byei ayeidawbon (the '1300 Revolution' named after the Burmese calendar year)[2], and December 20, the day the first martyr Aung Kyaw fell, commemorated by students as 'Bo Aung Kyaw Day'.[3]
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The locals always called it Myanmar, and regardless of government would probably still have renamed it back after becoming independent from Britain.
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It's also easier to pronounce, and will probably stick around regardless.. Think Germany vs Deutschland
Fucking Myanmar... (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not trying to say Iraq wasn't justified. It doesn't matter. Whether it was or not, I think Myanmar's military rulers need a good ass-kicking. And there's an ass we could kick overnight if we wanted to. Just bust in there to their headquarters and fire some automatic weapons at them just the same way they do to the innocent monks. That'll teach 'em. Throw in an election to put up a REAL government, and we'd be home by Christmas.
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The whole point of the protests is that the ruling junta never allowed her to take office after they won the election.
It's worse than that... (Score:3, Interesting)
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Throw in an election to put up a REAL government, and we'd be home by Christmas.
They had an election, and the junta ignored the results and put the newly elected government under house arrest or killed them.
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See, I know I come off like some sort of crazy Bush-cheering jingo when I advocate military action, but I actually almost never support drastic measures or war (and never did in Iraq, for example).
internet censorship in Myanmar brought to you by (Score:4, Informative)
Re:internet censorship in Myanmar brought to you b (Score:2)
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Yes, you're quite right. Fortinet are only making money out of the situation and therefore should be entirely excused of any suggestion of wrongdoing. Likewise anyone selling arms to the Burmese government should also be excused because they're not the ones actually shooting monks in the fucking head.
If you disagree with my comparison, please do feel free to let u
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The link is to a cache of the official www.myanmar.gov.mm site, which is now down and replaced with another one, cleansed of all refs to Fortinet.
I wonder why they have an ind
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http://www.attrition.org/mirror/attrition/2000/08/01/www.myanmar.com/ [attrition.org]
A bunch of the government sites got defaced before that too, but i can't find the mirror sites.
So Read... (Score:2)
WTF? Haven't you heard of Burmah Oil? (Score:2, Informative)
It has large quantities of oil and gas...
WTF do you think there are problems in the place all of a sudden? Do you think it's coincidence there are problems and unrest in oil producing countries now that world oil production has fallen for the last few years?
http://www.worldoil.com/INFOCENTER/STATISTICS_DETAIL.asp?Statfile=_worldoilproduction [worldoil.com]
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All of a sudden? How about a couple of decades...
""In 1988 [wikipedia.org], unrest over economic mismanagement and political oppression by the government led to widespread pro-democracy demonstrations throughout the country known as the 8888 Uprising. Hundreds of demonstrators were massacred by security forces, and General Saw Maung staged a coup d'état and formed the State Law and Order Restoration Council (SLORC)."
flamebait my butt (Score:2, Flamebait)
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like godwin's law ... (Score:2)
Brilliant global politics (Score:3, Insightful)
The situation for the US, or any Western government which might want to get involved militarily in Myanmar today is simple - involve your military today in Myanmar, and you will almost certainly find yourself facing the very threatening military might of China, their strongest ally.
It would require you reading maybe half of one of th
that soo ? (Score:2)
The situation for the US, or any Western government which might want to get involved militarily in Myanmar today is simple - involve your military today in Myanmar, and you will almost certainly find yourself facing the very threatening military might of China, their strongest ally.
i didnt see any hesitation from anybody on the face of the world on bush & co part when they decided to invade iraq.
no sir, methinks you need to read a lot of 'articles' and actual late politics history before putting out such brilliant theories belittling other arguments.
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China and Iraq are allies? This is news to me.
-:sigma.SB
in case you had been in mars for the last 5 years, (Score:2)
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I really doubt that. Burma isn't worth a major war to China. It's just some oil and gas, one of the many backup sources that China has been lining up by spending a few hundred million on development and sweetheart trade deals -
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Honestly, things are a lot more complex than you think.
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something being overused does not mean that it will be misused every time that it is used.
But it's an excellent warning sign.Re: (Score:2)
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So does going to war with Iran, but no one realizes that.
I mean... If someone shot up your largest foreign oil supplier you'd get pretty angry too. It would be as if China started bombing Saudi Arabia.
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Re:Where are you, George? (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh, grow up.
Iran and Iranians are only too happy to aid the insurgents in Iraq for the very, very simple reason that a bunch of total cunts dropped weapons of mass destruction on them in the form of nerve gas and bio weapons. Who were these bastards that went beyond any acceptable limits of civilised behaviour? Well, goodness me! It seems that it was the good old US of fucking A and it's ongoing mission to bring democracy and strong IP laws to the world! And strangely, dropping plagues on Iran has led to anti-American feeling there?! They're just unreasonable, those ragheads.
If America had treated my country the way the US treated Iran, I'D be an insurgent too, and I suspect you would too, without any need to listen to anti-China fairy stories.
Apart from anything else, there's a mountain of reasons to hate China without having to make new ones up. Unless, of course, you are really just trying to justify some other totally unconnected policy.
TWW
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Yes, but that didn't fit Rumsfeld's self-justification so they had to be pushed and pushed into a corner so that they'd support I'madinnerjacket who would in turn spout the correct rhetoric to give a causus beli for an invasion. Which in
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The people of Iran, yes. The government of Iran, not so much.
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Don't be an asshat. I'm not judging Iran for supporting the insurgency in Iraq (as with the nukes issue - they'd be crazy not to) - I'm just saying its a fact, and that China amongst others are supporting Iran in this enterprise because it suits their interests. Tricking China into militarily propping up the Burmese regime would be a tactically sound move by the US, although it isn't terribly likely to work - the Chinese government are simply too cautious and not as inclined as the US governme
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That's true but you grossly overstated it in your OP. China is not bleeding the US dry by supporting Iran. The US is losing some cannon fodder in return for huge stockpiles of oil and the chance to test new technology in actual combat situations. T
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Burma has lots of oil (Score:5, Informative)
At the risk of sounding like a broken record, Burma has tons of oil. Chevron and Total are the two Western companies profiting the most, but China, India and Russia all have significant (read multi-BILLION dollar) investments as well..
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How about we (speaking as a citizen of the U.S.) keep our nose out of other countries' business? We don't need to ride to the rescue every time someone somewhere on the globe is being oppressed. If the government of Myanmar wants to cut-off Internet connectivity to its citizens, that is *not* a reason for the U.S. to meddle in that si
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It's called UUCP.
In the 70s the CIA did a report on this to answer the question "can the government control email" and the report said "as long as people have phone lines and modems, no".
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Until recently a charity called Information Without Borders was developing a promising-looking project called Sneakernet: basically an encrypted delay-tolerant network [ucsb.edu] using epidemic routing [nasa.gov] between Bluetooth-enabled handheld devices. Messages would hop from person to person across the social network until they reached an internet gateway
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The 'internet' hasn't crashed. Any (small) part of it that may have gone through Burma is now simply going around it.
Routing around damage, as it were.
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And be accused again of causing death and destruction to innocent civilians? How about someone else do it this time. China, Russia, France...hell, Sweden, Hungary, Estonia, Peru...you guys go do it this time.