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  • Baidu's List of Censored Search Terms
    By: charles
    Date: 01 Jun 2009
    Categories: Asia, China, ONI, Political filtering
    China’s New Tang Dynasty Television has obtained a list of the words censored by Baidu.com, China’s largest search engine, according to reports in The Epoch Times.
    0 comment(s)
  • Iranians Regain Access to Facebook After Day-Long Ban
    By: charles
    Date: 01 Jun 2009
    Categories: Iran, Middle East and North Africa (MENA), ONI, Political filtering
    Iranians regained access to Facebook and Twitter following a one-day government-imposed ban last week, CNN News reports. Iran’s president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, stated that he had not called for the ban, adding that he believes “in maximum freedom of expression.”
    0 comment(s)
  • UAE: An Expanding Censorship Regime?
    By: charles
    Date: 31 May 2009
    Categories: Middle East and North Africa (MENA), ONI, Political filtering, United Arab Emirates
    Dubai police are pursuing a plan to censor upwards of 500 search terms deemed offensive in an effort to block access to certain websites, AME Info reports. Though no progress has yet been made, according to Lieutenant General Dhahi Khalfan Tamim, this follows the Dubai Police’s statement in April of their intention to protect the youth of UAE from “pornographic” and “anti-religious” video content on YouTube.
    0 comment(s)
  • German Police Shut Down Wikileaks Domain
    By: charles
    Date: 30 May 2009
    Categories: Europe, Germany, ONI, Political filtering, Take-down
    According to The Inquirer, German police have raided the offices of WikiLeaks.de, a website that publishes leaks of government documents, transferring control of the domain to German authorities and shutting down the website.
    1 comment(s)
  • UK: Plan to Monitor Internet Communication
    By: charles
    Date: 07 May 2009
    Categories: Conflict and security filtering, Europe, Internet tools filtering, Surveillance, United Kingdom
    In an effort to “modernize” police tactics and surveillance, UK’s home secretary has called for the implementation of a system that records internet contact between users, according to BBC News.
    3 comment(s)
  • Iran and Web Proxies
    By: charles
    Date: 06 May 2009
    Categories: Circumvention, Filtering tech and software, Internet tools filtering, Iran, Middle East and North Africa (MENA), Proxy blocking
    Iran’s Internet censorship regime is generally accepted to be one of the most aggressive in the world, yet according to the New York Times, by autumn 2008, more than 400,000 Iranians were able to access an uncensored web thanks to a software created by Chinese computer experts working for Falun Gong.
    0 comment(s)
  • Technology Executives Visit Iraq
    By: charles
    Date: 27 Apr 2009
    Categories: Filtering tech and software, Iraq, Middle East and North Africa (MENA), ONI
    According to BBC News reports, top executives from major Internet companies including Google, YouTube, Twitter, Howcast, and Meetup visited Iraq last week in order to assess how their technologies might assist in the ongoing fight against corruption.
    0 comment(s)
  • Google: No Intention to Censor UAE's Internet
    By: charles
    Date: 20 Apr 2009
    Categories: Filtering tech and software, Internet tools filtering, Middle East and North Africa (MENA), ONI, Social filtering, United Arab Emirates
    According to reports in Business Intelligence—Middle East, Google has no intention of engaging in an Internet censorship program with the United Arab Emirates.
    2 comment(s)
  • Errors in Australia's Filtering Regime
    By: charles
    Date: 19 Apr 2009
    Categories: Australia, Australia/New Zealand, Filtering tech and software, ONI, Social filtering
    Based partially on a top-secret blacklist of websites, Australia’s program of Internet filtration is still in full force. Government censorship recently resurfaced in the media when Australia’s Communications Minister, Stephen Conroy, admitted that certain images were added to the blacklist in error and blamed the Russian mob for the addition of a dentist’s site, according to reports in The Age.
    2 comment(s)
  • Japan: Police Remove Messages from Cell Phone Social Networking Sites
    By: charles
    Date: 10 Apr 2009
    Categories: Asia, Japan, Take-down
    According to Japanese daily Yomiuri, police have asked six cell phone social networking sites to delete messages from underage users looking for dates.
    0 comment(s)
  • Bangladesh Blocks Access to YouTube
    By: charles
    Date: 22 Mar 2009
    Categories: Asia, Bangladesh, ONI, Political filtering
    According to news reports, the government of Bangladesh blocked access to YouTube on March 9 after the site hosted a recording of a meeting between the prime minister and military officials following a border guard mutiny in late February of this year. On March 21, users in Bangladesh confirmed YouTube was unblocked after pressure from activists.
    0 comment(s)
  • India: Maharashtra Wants Censorship of Google Earth
    By: charles
    Date: 12 Mar 2009
    Categories: Asia, Conflict and security filtering, India, ONI, Political filtering
    According to reports in The Hindu, India’s Maharashtra government is revisiting legal options to censor Google Earth in the wake of the program’s alleged use in planning the November 2008 terrorist attacks in Mumbai.
    6 comment(s)
  • Variation in Blogging Censorship in China
    By: charles
    Date: 25 Feb 2009
    Categories: Asia, China, Non-filtering content restrictions, ONI, Political filtering
    A recent report on user-generated content on social media and blogging platforms in China reveals that there is variation in censorship levels across fifteen different blogging platforms according to Radio Free Asia.
    0 comment(s)
  • Launch of M-Lab as Net Neutrality Tool
    By: charles
    Date: 12 Feb 2009
    Categories: Filtering tech and software, ONI, United States of America, United States/Canada
    The recent launch of Measurement Lab (M-Lab) provides consumers, regulators, and content providers with the details about their network’s performance, according to CNET. Backed by Google, the New America Foundation (affiliated with the Democratic Party), and the PlanetLab consortium, M-Lab aims to increase network transparency by allowing researchers to share data relating to network performance and regulation.
    0 comment(s)
  • Google Executives on Trial in Italy
    By: charles
    Date: 10 Feb 2009
    Categories: Arrests and legal action, Europe, Filtering tech and software, Italy, Take-down
    According to reports in the New York Times, four Google executives are on trial in Milan for charges of defamation and privacy violation regarding a video posted on Google’s Italian website.
    0 comment(s)
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