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  • Tunisia Shuts Off Internet Filter
    By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 13 Jan 2011
    Categories: Filtering tech and software, Human rights, Internet tools filtering, Legislation, Middle East and North Africa (MENA), Political filtering, Social filtering, Tunisia
    After years of pervasive filtering, Tunisia has shut off its censors...but will it last?
    0 comment(s)
  • Threats to the Open Net: Week of 12/13/2010
    By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 17 Dec 2010
    Categories: Threats to the Open Net
    In this week's roundup...a profile of Tor, no censorship for Malaysia, the UN mulls over tighter Internet regulations, and more...
    0 comment(s)
  • WikiLeaks: Reactions from the ONI Team
    By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 10 Dec 2010
    Categories: Canada, Conflict and security filtering, Intermediary Censorship, ONI, Political filtering, United States of America, United States/Canada
    As WikiLeaks dominates the media, members of the ONI team have shared their thoughts. Read more from PIs John Palfrey, Jonathan Zittrain, and Ron Deibert, as well as thoughts from ONI staffers.
    0 comment(s)
  • Threats to the Open Net: Week of 12/6/2010
    By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 10 Dec 2010
    Categories: Arrests and legal action, Asia, China, Iran, Latin America, Legislation, Middle East and North Africa (MENA), Non-filtering content restrictions, Threats to the Open Net, United States/Canada, Venezuela
    In this week's roundup...A blogger released, Chinese high-level hackers, Venezuela's regulation of the 'Net, and more...
    0 comment(s)
  • Threats to the Open Net: Week of 11/29/2010
    By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 03 Dec 2010
    Categories: Threats to the Open Net
    In this week's roundup: U.S. government seizes 82 domains, Facebook deactivates the accounts of pro-democracy groups in Egypt, Amazon pulls Wikileaks, and more...
    0 comment(s)
  • Turkey: "Unbanning" of YouTube Short-Lived Indeed
    By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 03 Nov 2010
    Categories: Turkey
    Less than a week after the media declared YouTube accessible in Turkey, the country has again blocked the site, this time in response to a video purportedly showing former opposition leader Deniz Baykal in a hotel room with a woman who is not his wife.
    0 comment(s)
  • Turkey: Will Unbanning of YouTube Be Short-Lived?
    By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 02 Nov 2010
    Categories: Turkey
    YouTube has been banned in Turkey since 2007. Now, for the first time in two years, the popular video-sharing site is once again accessible in Turkey. Since the site was unblocked, however, videos that were the initial impetus for the censorship have been restored. Will the unblocking be short-lived or will Turkey stand by this step toward Internet freedom?
    0 comment(s)
  • Internet Filtering in Latin America
    By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 02 Nov 2010
    Categories: Filtering tech and software, Latin America, Political filtering, Social filtering, Voluntary filtering
    Blogger David Sasaki offers a picture of Internet censorship and freedom of expression in Latin America, taking a close look at third generation controls.
    0 comment(s)
  • A Moment in Time: A Very Short History of Content Regulation
    By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 21 Sep 2010
    Categories: Filtering tech and software, Internet tools filtering, IP blocking, ONI, Overblocking, Political filtering, Social filtering
    "As the Internet is increasingly international, we increasingly need to look for international solutions," posits ONI's Rob Faris, discussing content regulation at Google's Liberty at 2010 conference in Budapest, Hungary on September 21, 2010.
    0 comment(s)
  • Would Censoring the Internet Prevent Cyber-Bullying?
    By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 20 Jul 2010
    Categories: Australia, Australia/New Zealand, Cybercrime and security, Defamation, Filtering tech and software, Hate speech, Obscenity, Social filtering, United States of America, United States/Canada
    Two op-eds this week argue for and against filtering as a means of protecting children from cyberbullying. Although all parties agree that parents need to take responsibility for children's online activities, some Australians believe that a filter would further protect young people online.
    0 comment(s)
  • Facebook Blocked in Pakistan Following "Draw Mohammad Day" Competition
    By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 19 May 2010
    Categories: Asia, Hate speech, Middle East and North Africa (MENA), Overblocking, Pakistan, Political filtering, Social filtering, United Arab Emirates
    Following the creation of a Facebook page called "Everybody Draw Mohammad Day," a Pakistani court ordered the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) to block the page until 31 May.
    0 comment(s)
  • Is Blocking RapeLay the Solution?
    By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 02 Apr 2010
    Categories: Asia, Australia, Australia/New Zealand, Japan, Search result removal, Social filtering, United States of America, United States/Canada
    Controversy is brewing over a Japanese rape-simulation game that is freely accessible online; some are suggesting that search-result filtering might be the answer. Are they right?
    0 comment(s)
  • Google.cn Redirects to Hong Kong...For Now
    By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 25 Mar 2010
    Categories: Asia, China, Political filtering
    In January of 2010, following attacks on Google's corporate infrastructure originating from China, Google made the fateful decision to stop censoring results on its Chinese-language Google.cn site. Just a few days ago, Google finally made good on its promise, shutting down its filter and redirecting traffic to Google.com.hk, Google's unfiltered site hosted in the Hong Kong SAR.
    0 comment(s)
  • ONI Releases Special Report on Microsoft Bing Filtering in Arab World
    By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 04 Mar 2010
    Categories: 
    A new OpenNet Initiative report entitled "Sex, Social Mores, and Keyword Filtering: Microsoft Bing in the 'Arabian Countries'", explores Bing's practice of filtering sex and LGBT content across the Arab world.
    0 comment(s)
  • Pakistan Blocks YouTube Videos
    By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 08 Feb 2010
    Categories: Asia, Pakistan, Political filtering
    In 2008, the Pakistan Telecommunications Authority blocked YouTube in what was said to be a reaction to a trailer of Geert Wilder's film "Fitna" hosted on the video-sharing site. The ban was reversed soon afterward, and since then, Pakistani users have enjoyed unfettered access to YouTube...until now.
    0 comment(s)
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