• By: Rebekah Heacock
    Date: 29 Jun 2009
    A Canadian software developer has successfully developed a software that can access blocked or censored information from the Internet. The software has been downloaded by 18,000 Iranians in their efforts to access censored news from Iran. Censored or blocked information in the Internet can now be accessed with a new Canadian technology that can link to a proxy to allow the Internet user to access the blocked information. The new technology was developed by Rafal Rohosinzki and his team and was designed to overcome curbs on news and social networks Internet sites. ‘This speaks to the hunger for access to information when it’s being denied’, the developer said.
  • By: Rebekah Heacock
    Date: 29 Jun 2009
    The OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media, Miklos Haraszti, criticised as restrictive today amendments to the country's communication law, adopted on 24 June by the Kazakh Parliament, and called on President Nursultan Nazarbayev not to promulgate them. "Despite some minor changes introduced by the Senate, this law limits freedom of the Internet and media freedom in general. Its adoption would be a step backwards in the democratisation of Kazakhstan's media governance," Haraszti wrote in a letter to President Nazarbayev.
  • By: Rebekah Heacock
    Date: 29 Jun 2009
    The Great Australian Firewall will try blocking websites that host or sell video games not suitable for children under the age of 15. A spokesman for Senator for Victoria Stephen Conroy told The Age on Thursday that the government's internet censorship regime will extend to downloadable and web-based games that don't meet Australia's MA15+ rating standard. Because Australia's classification board currently lacks an adult R18+ rating for video games, games which exceed the impact of what the MA15+ rating allows are refused classification, making them illegal to sell or exhibit in the country.
  • By: Rebekah Heacock
    Date: 29 Jun 2009
    nternet has revolutionized the way people communicate and act together as a group, theoretically allowing more power to individuals and groups to access information, share thoughts and promote personal and social agenda. China has also seen tremendous penetration of Internet related technologies and usage. The following article aims to give a quick overview and encourage a general discussion about the impact of Internet on Chinese society as a form of self-expression, social involvement, social grass-root movements and a tool for promotion of personal and social agenda in China where human rights and freedom of speech are believed to be limited and restricted by an authoritarian control. The paper will give a quick introduction on the Chinese Internet characteristics, will then present some famous recent case-studies that were translated by media and bloggers to English and discuss how those reflect on the current situation in China.
  • By: Rebekah Heacock
    Date: 26 Jun 2009
    A new electronic sites law is being reviewed and drafted by the Jordanian Parliament which requires website administrators to provide their site's passwords to the government's Printing and Publication Directorate. In case the admins refuse, says the draft, the sites will be closed down by the concerned authorities.
  • By: Rebekah Heacock
    Date: 26 Jun 2009
    Dictators these days must resort to ever-trickier ways to prevent the truth of their failings from being made known via digital technology. Just one image in cyber space, such as the killing of Neda Agha-Soltan during Iran's protests, can plant doubts about a regime's claim to power – even among its supporters – and begin to erode its legitimacy. At times, however, a regime's attempts to block online citizen activists are as desperate as its violent crackdowns are tragic.
  • By: Rebekah Heacock
    Date: 26 Jun 2009
    Just days after Norway's data protection department told ISPs they must delete all personal IP address-related data three weeks after collection, it's now become safer than ever to be a file-sharer in Norway. The only law firm with a license to track pirates has just seen it expire and it won't be renewed.
  • By: Rebekah Heacock
    Date: 26 Jun 2009
    I'm not sure what the Chinese government is thinking, or whether certain parts of certain ministries and party apparatus have gotten completely out of control. Until recently, it had seemed to me that the Chinese government was managing its censorship system with surprising success: censoring enough (combined with strategic arrests) to keep people from using the Internet to organize a successful nation-wide political opposition movement; but at the same time allowing enough space for online discourse and citizen-muckraking that people have felt freer and more empowered than ever before, which actually seemed to work in favor of the central government's legitimacy - despite being very bad news for corrupt local officials. But this month, something shifted. It's unclear whether the shift is long-lasting or just temporary madness until the PRC's 60th anniversary on October 1st.
  • By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 25 Jun 2009
    Kazakh lawmakers have approved new internet legislation that media rights activists say will limit freedom of speech in the Central Asian nation. The Bill would subject internet outlets - such as chat rooms, blogs and online stores - to the same criminal prosecution currently applied to traditional media. Foreign websites deemed to be in breach of Kazakh law could also be blocked. Authorities said the legislation aims to curb the distribution of child pornography, extremist literature and other unsuitable material.
  • By: Rebekah Heacock
    Date: 25 Jun 2009
    Chinese net censors appeared to block Google's worldwide website last night, as that country's government continues to grapple with the company over pornographic links turned up by its search engine. After 9pm local time, the The Financial Times reports, attempts to access google.com and gmail.com from separate computers in Beijing were unsuccessful, but the sites could still be reached by way of proxy servers. That's typically an indication that government censors are tinkering with the net. After two hours, the sites were accessible again.

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