Cuba Is Blocking Text Messages That Contain Words Like 'Democracy' (theverge.com) 91
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Verge: The Cuban government is blocking text messages that contain words such as "democracy," "human rights," and "hunger strike," according to an investigation from local dissidents. In a Spanish-language report published last week, prominent blogger Yoani Sanchez and journalist Reinaldo Escobar found that the government is filtering 30 keywords and blocking the transmission of any texts that contain them. Reuters later confirmed that messages containing the Spanish words for "democracy" and "human rights" did not reach their destination, nor did those containing Sanchez's name or "Somos Mas": an opposition group that worked on the investigation. Texts that included the word "protest" were transmitted, the agency reported on Tuesday, and those that were blocked were marked as "sent" on the sender's phone. It's not clear how long the communist government has been filtering keywords and blocking texts, and activists suspect that there may be more terms that it is targeting. Cuba has long been accused of committing human rights abuses, including arbitrary detentions and restrictions on freedom of speech. "We discovered not just us but the entire country is being censored," Eliecer Avila, the head of Somos Mas, tells Reuters. "It just shows how insecure and paranoid the government is."
Cuban Firewall (Score:5, Funny)
is state of the art I am sure. Have a cigar!
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Well I've always had a deep respect
And I mean that most sincerely.
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You whooshed me. Decipher.
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You whooshed me. Decipher.
Do a Web search for the words from any of the two followups, or just for "have a cigar".
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OK. I didn't google anything but I think I may just have unwhooshed myself. I am famous for not knowing some of the lyrics of a few songs. Especially if they may be from England. I was, in fact, going to make a diff quote from that song, but skipped on it. Thanks.
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The governments are probably aware, even expected it. They're satisfied affecting the sizable pool of Casuals. The same mentality is seen in all kinds of muzzles and gags, like DRM.
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Now you have been whooshed.
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Well I've always had a deep respect And I mean that most sincerely.
I think the band's fantastic
That is really what I think.
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Which one is Pink?
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Which one is Pink?
Pink Anderson [wikipedia.org], I guess.
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RIP Syd & RIchard.
Democratic hunger strike for human rights! (Score:1)
Take THAT, amigo!
Just hope Cuba doesn't end up like this
http://www.rinconcete.com/imag... [rinconcete.com]
Democracy Is A Failure (Score:1)
So is socialism, but mob rule is also a failure. These are just false ways of ruling ourselves that do not work, but we are afraid to abandon.
What is best for Cuba? I do not know... but it is not socialist leaders, nor mob rule.
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Government always rules with the consent of the governed, all that changes is the method of gaining that consent. Ballots are usually preferred by the populace, ruthless subjugation of dissent by the rulers.
Democracy hasn't failed as a principle, just most of the implementations. In fact, some of the happiest nations with the (per capita) strongest economies in the world are socialist democracies, so exactly how have they failed?
What has failed is most of the attempts to keep democracies democratic, espec
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Very high happiness ratings... and people willing to risk their life crossing a hundred miles of open ocean in craft barely fit to float across a lake.
Either the ratings are a lie, or the picture is far more complicated than they can portray.
Still, some have claimed that the best form of government is a benevolent dictatorship, and there's some truth to that, but even if you truly have one, how do you keep it benevolent? Historically such arrangements have rarely outlasted a single dictator, and of course t
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Democracy is the worst way to run a government, except for all the other types of government that have been tried.
Name one form of government that has turned out better in practice than Democracy.
That's why the Cuban love the Castros so! (Score:4, Insightful)
Really? (Score:1)
I am curious why some of the Somos Mas leadership are not yet wearing Colombian neckties.
Columbian Necktis (Score:2)
I am curious why some of the Somos Mas leadership are not yet wearing Colombian neckties.
Please explain.
Google "Columbian Necktie". It doesn't mean what you think it might mean.
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Read your post again. See those two words right next to each other, "communist dictator"? Those are two unrelated concepts, like capitalist democracy - one refers to the politics of government, which is the part you seem to be objecting to, and the other refers to the economy, and has never been implemented at scale, for all that it's often been emblazoned on the banners of the revolution in order to gather populist support. And in fact "communist dictator" borders on the oxymoronic.
Communism: economic s
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If every single implementation of a concept suffers the same set of flaws, perhaps that concept isn't that good in the first place?
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Except that it doesn't. Communism is actually not uncommon within small, close-knit communities. It just doesn't doesn't seem to scale well beyond that (though there's precious little evidence that anyone has ever honestly attempted it) I think though that that is not so much a flaw in the concept itself, as it is a lack of prerequisite social technologies.
In order to honestly claim that "the people" own something, "the people" need to share equal voice in its use - something that sounds suspiciously sim
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If I a cat is defined as a furry creature with four legs and a tail, and you complain that every cat you've seen has scales, fins, and gills instead, is the problem in the definition of a cat, or that the people claiming to give you "cats" are actually lying through their teeth?
Communism has in fact been deployed very often throughout the world to good effect - in families, communes, monasteries, etc. The problem is that nobody has figured out how to scale it beyond the size of a tight-knit community. And
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Are there any capitalist dictatorships?
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Cuba is efficient at constraining dissent, yet surprisingly less brutal about it than most dictatorships. They have political prisoners, but they never execute them anymore. Often they let them out of jail and just harass and disrupt them.
The Swedes (Score:1)
The Swedes love Cuba. They go there by the boat load and clog up the beaches. They never leave the tourist areas though.
Re: The Swedes (Score:1)
Evidence? (Score:1)
> according to an investigation from local dissidents
In other news, according to an investigation by local vegans, tofu tastes just as good as steak!
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Have you ever received a text message from Cuba with the "banned" words? There is your evidence. /s
This could be hard to get around (Score:2)
Re: This could be hard to get around (Score:2)
Maybe you could defeat the filter using i33t sp33k. D3m0crACy ftw!
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There's no reason you couldn't easily encrypt texts, so long as you trusted your phone. Encryption is basically a math function that takes two numbers: an encryption key, and a really long arbitrary number that's the message to be encrypted (say, the 150 bytes of a text interpreted as one 1200 bit number), and as a result it generates another number, generally roughly the same length as the input message.
Decryption is a very similar process that takes a decryption key (sometimes, but not always, the same a
What about dem0cracy? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:What about dem0cracy? (Score:4, Insightful)
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So you'd really play change-the-spelling games with SMS when the local government has a habit of locking up people for saying the word out loud, and killing people who say it several times?
No revolution ever started through compliance. If it were me I'd be looking for something a little more sophisticated than simple letter shifting eg OTP is low tech but very robust.
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I'm referring to the highly user-identifying nature of SMS.
So am I. If you intercept my SMS: "XCVGP MTHYU FPOLW TUSHA", what does that mean to you? Without a OTP it is meaningless
If I put in more than 5 minutes effort I would create a OTP that has built-in plausible deniability (eg using real phrase instead of random characters such as "pick up milk from the corner store after work please").
My point is that screening for known dictionary words is amateur-hour security measures. It doesn't really stop anything other than the casual bystander (who is unlikely to be
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I used your link to translate your post to Chinese and back, and got "Machine translation is free and very good now are google's bottom quality curve even free so rarely realize it. See the Http://www.freetranslation.com... freetranslation.com] better results."
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"Chinese and back" is not a valid metric. Translation party sites are fun and all, but translation engines are not symmetric because languages are not symmetric. A translation is often going to be imperfect, so using a raw translation as input just amplifies the error level.
The metric you want is: How much effort would a human have to put in to make the translation output idiomatic for the target language? And the answer to that is decreasing rapidly with modern quality rule-based translation engines.
Censorship Arms Race (Score:1)
Game the system like everyone else, Cuba (Score:1)
So do what everyone else does, Cuba. Tell the punters the have a democracy, hold sham elections where only establishment candidates can win and boas
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Democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the rest.
Please, name a single form of government that has been better in practice than Democracy.
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Of course if the population (hence thei
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I can't see the parent comment (anyone else unable to change their browsing thresholds?) , so I apologize if I misinterpreted anything that would be clearer in context.
The problem in maintaining a democracy is I think not the distribution of largess - obviously such distribution needs to be coupled with a societal awareness that you can only squeeze the golden goose so hard without killing it, but while that excess may lead to the collapse of an economy, it won't directly degrade the legitimacy of the democ
Fuck em! (Score:2)
Darn
Embargoes
Mean
Others
Can
Ruin
All
Civility.
Yanno?
No problem (Score:2)
Cuba... (Score:2)
....is a communist country! Duh!
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Not really relevant, even if it were true. Communism is just an economic policy (one currently essentially impossible to implement at scale)
The statement you're looking for is "Cuba is a dictatorship!"
Chinese Democracy (Score:2)
Crap so that means the Chinese can't listen to Guns N' Roses latest album?
Falling for US propaganda (Score:2)
Signal (Score:2)
Time for Cubans to install Signal.
Sinking ship (Score:1)
It's just a matter of time.