• By: Rebekah Heacock
    Date: 07 Aug 2009
    Widespread internet attacks that hit services at Google, Facebook and Twitter on Thursday could have been the result of an online assault against a single blogger. According to senior industry figures, the strikes that affected hundreds of millions of web users around the globe on Thursday were part of an attempt to damage just one individual - a controversial Georgian known only as Cyxymu. Max Kelly, Facebook's chief security officer, told CNet news that the strike was an attempt to silence Cyxymu - an outspoken critic of last year's conflict between Georgia and Russia in South Ossetia - as the anniversary of the war approaches.
  • By: Rebekah Heacock
    Date: 06 Aug 2009
    In the wake of China's campaign to limit the availability of pornographic content online, Google (NSDQ: GOOG)'s search market share in the country appears to be declining. In June, Baidu overtook Google as the number one search engine in China, according to NetApplications. More Internet Insights White Papers * Delivering Enterprise Advantages: Intranets & Extranets * Web-Based Course Management and Web Services Webcasts * Should Global CIOs Help Drive The Business, Or Align With The Business? * Connected Decisions: How a Holistic Approach to Decision Making Can Help Insurers Build a Profitable Book of Business Reports * XP's Day Of Reckoning Is At Hand. Prepare. * Sun's Future Under Oracle Videos In this ReviewCam, we get an inside look at Magnify's video publishing system, including some of its fun bells and whistles, like its ability to auto-tweet, and the very cool capability to pull in videos from many sources around the web. Get more from your new iPhone; InformationWeek's Mitch Wagner showsyou how to master the keyboard, clipboard, Spotlight search, and morefeatures of the new iPhone 3.0 software. EMC acquired Data Domain in early July. Director of InformationWeek Analytics discusses the implications of the acquisition and data deduplication, including some of the industries that the technology is most appropriate for. In this ReviewCam, we get an inside look at Magnify's video publishing system, including some of its fun bells and whistles, like its ability to auto-tweet, and the very cool capability to pull in videos from many sources around the web. A NetApplications graph shows that Baidu began gaining search market share late last year and that Google China started slipping in March. Chinese authorities met with Google executives in June "to discuss problems with the Google.cn service and its serving of pornographic images and content based on foreign language searches," as a Google spokesperson described it at the time.
  • By: Rebekah Heacock
    Date: 06 Aug 2009
    Malaysia is considering imposing an Internet filter to block "undesirable" websites, on the grounds of maintaining racial harmony in the multicultural nation, a senior official said Thursday. The move was quickly condemned by the opposition which described it as a "horror of horrors" that would destroy the relative freedom of the Internet in Malaysia, where the mainstream press is tightly controlled. A senior official with the National Security Council (NSC) confirmed reports that the coalition government was considering imposing controls -- effectively scrapping a 1996 guarantee that it would not censor the Internet.
  • By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 05 Aug 2009
    A teenager sent by his parents to a boot camp to cure his Internet addiction died after he was beaten by camp supervisors, police in the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region claimed yesterday. The three teachers who allegedly beat Deng Senshan, 16, were detained by local police Sunday, Deng Fei, the boy’s father, a businessman from Ziyuan county, told the Global Times yesterday. “We are investigating a case where a high school student was beaten to death by his camp supervisors. The case is still under investigation,” a police officer at the Jiangnan branch of Nanning Public Security Bureau said.
  • By: Rebekah Heacock
    Date: 05 Aug 2009
    When Shanghai blogger Isaac Mao tried to watch a YouTube clip of Chinese police beating Tibetans, all he got was an error message. Mao thought the error — just after the one-year anniversary of a crackdown on Tibetan protesters in China — was too suspicious to be coincidental, so he reported it on a new Harvard-based Web site that tracks online censorship. Meanwhile, more than 100 other people in China did the same thing. The spike in reports on Herdict.org in March pointed to government interference rather than a run-of-the-mill technical glitch, even before Google Inc. confirmed China was blocking its YouTube video-sharing site.
  • By: Rebekah Heacock
    Date: 05 Aug 2009
    Here’s a wake-up call for those just digesting Pakistan’s ban on the “slander” of its leaders via SMS or e-mail. It might just pay to be careful while exchanging a joke about national leaders in India too. Anything you send or receive through the Net will soon come under the scanner—if it even remotely resembles anything “offensive or against national security”, you could well land up in jail. If the rules being drafted under the Information Technology (IT) Act come into force, the government will have sweeping new powers to monitor, intercept or even block any content—and also prosecute people. Pretty soon, millions of Indian users will find that it’s no longer easy to put up just about anything on the internet without bothering about it. A photograph, a joke or an innocent, honest comment on a contentious issue could prove to be troublesome depending on how a government agency interprets it.
  • By: Rebekah Heacock
    Date: 04 Aug 2009
    The U.S. Marine Corps has banned Twitter, Facebook, MySpace and other social media sites from its networks, effective immediately. "These internet sites in general are a proven haven for malicious actors and content and are particularly high risk due to information exposure, user generated content and targeting by adversaries," reads a Marine Corps order, issued Monday. "The very nature of SNS [social network sites] creates a larger attack and exploitation window, exposes unnecessary information to adversaries and provides an easy conduit for information leakage that puts OPSEC [operational security], COMSEC [communications security], [and] personnel... at an elevated risk of compromise." The Marines' ban will last a year. It was drawn up in response to a late July warning from U.S. Strategic Command, which told the rest of the military it was considering a Defense Department-wide ban on the Web 2.0 sites, due to network security concerns.
  • By: Rebekah Heacock
    Date: 04 Aug 2009
    In line with my irrepressible contrarian streak, I've always viewed Internet censorship as a problem that is ultimately solvable and, thus, less important than other problems facing the Web. For example, we have no tools to fight the proliferation of spin or the growth of "enclave extremism" and homophily; both of these problems do not lend themselves to easy quantitative solutions and may turn out to be much more important in the long run. Internet censorship, on the other hand, usually presents a rather boring set of challenges - e.g. "I can't get from A to B". As most such problems, it could be solved by clever tinkering with the system ("well, if you can't get from A to B, then go to C first and then use C to get to B" - this is the kind of anti-censorship solution that proxy-based technologies like TOR have eventually embraced). As the GreenDam saga shows, the methods favored by censors evolve and get more sophisticated as well (today, Internet censors may not even let you think about etting to point B - you may never have the time to even consider the C option, as your browser will be shut down). There is, of course, nothing surprising about it: why wouldn't governments be doing this? After all, there are many smart techies working for the governments as well - and sometimes they even believe in and like what they are doing.
  • By: Rebekah Heacock
    Date: 04 Aug 2009
    Red faces all round in the New South Wales Education Department, as news surfaced last week that a filter supposed to block porn was actually letting it through, and blocking perfectly good educational material instead. This unfortunate state of affairs came to light when a female school student from Greenfell, NSW, went looking for information on the "swallow" – the avian variety – and the malfunctioning filter blocked access to a documentary on swallowing toothpaste whilst allowing her to view a male site talking about "inappropriate material".
  • By: Rebekah Heacock
    Date: 04 Aug 2009
    News about Internet companies and their censorship deals are so becoming so common, it's triggering less and less of a reaction. Both Yahoo and Google have reached agreements with their Chinese business partners, and their government liaisons, to block access to sites. Skype's Chinese language client censors "politically sensitive" phrases like Tiananmen Square and Human Rights. It's easy to become blasé about what's happening in China. It's far away, not a democracy and its peoples have never enjoyed a culture of press freedom or expression. And, after all, it's not like there's any threat to freedom of expression or access to information closer to home, is there?

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