• By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 05 Mar 2009
    Federal regulators proposed Tuesday to impose more than $12 million in fines on 600 telecoms that failed to file paperwork in 2008 explaining how they protect their customers' private information. At issue are annual reports that phone companies, internet telephony concerns, and calling-card companies need to file explaining how they protect individuals' phone records, cellphone location data and personal information from data brokers and over-the-line private investigators.
  • By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 05 Mar 2009
    Journalists in Ethiopia informed CPJ over the weekend that our Web site, which was blocked to Internet users in the capital, Addis Ababa, since August, was accessible again. Independent Ethiopian online news forums and blogs based outside the country also reported that sites discussing political dissent and human rights were also suddenly accessible. The editors of the sites linked the development to the February 25 release of the U.S. State Department's "2008 Human Rights Report" on Ethiopia. The report accused the government of restricting Internet access to its citizens and of "blocking opposition Web sites."
  • By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 05 Mar 2009
    As Internet filtering and censorship soars around the world, a comprehensive examination of leading circumvention technologies--carried out partly at Internet cafes in China, Vietnam, and South Korea--concludes that the leading tools work well but can slow Internet access significantly and, in some cases, present security holes.
  • By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 03 Mar 2009
    Eurojust - the EU body for judicial cooperation - is not investigating ways to intercept Skype calls, contrary to reports earlier this week. Eurojust originally said it aimed: "to overcome the technical and judicial obstacles to the interception of internet telephony systems". The group said it had been approached by Italian anti-Mafia cops who were struggling to keep up with La Cosa Nostra's use of new communications technology specifically Voice over Internet Protocol telephony services like Skype.
  • By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 03 Mar 2009
    I sat down and prepared for the interview with the old man. He had retired from teaching almost twenty years before, and was always a source of good material. I always liked talking to him because he never let me guess what he was thinking. He always let me know straight up what was on his mind. He looked at me and sighed. You and your silly computers, I could almost hear him saying it in his mind. “So, tell me” I asked, getting out my laptop and my camcorder “What would you take off of the Internet if you could?” “First of all, I want you to know that I think everyone has the right to do whatever he wants. But, I think there should also be some limits” he said. “Just limits…not censorship mind you, just limits. You know, to keep the kids safe.”
  • By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 03 Mar 2009
    As a tool for direct and unfettered access to information and its transmission, the internet constitutes a cultural and political challenge to certain regimes. Accordingly, some states in the Middle East and elsewhere seek to restrict their citizens from using the internet in a free and comprehensive manner. According to Journalists Without Borders, five of the 15 countries defined as "internet enemies" are in the Middle East: Egypt, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Syria and Tunisia. And five of the 11 countries defined as "under surveillance" are also from the Middle East: Bahrain, Jordan, Libya, the United Arab Emirates and Yemen.
  • By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 02 Mar 2009
    After several days of closure, the popular semi-independent Azerbaijani news and discussion website, Day.az, is back. However, raising additional questions about its brief disappearance, the site's forum — known for its open and somewhat democratic discussion — is not.
  • By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 02 Mar 2009
    The final nail in the coffin of the great Australian Firewall was hammered home last week when independent Senator Nick Xenophon withdrew support for the measure. This takes the voting arithmetic in the Australian Upper House beyond the point of no-return, as there are now 43 votes stacked up against the proposal with just 33 in favour.
  • By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 02 Mar 2009
    The New Zealand government has delayed by a month a controversial plan that critics say will allow internet users to be cut off just because they have been accused of copyright infringement. Protesters created an internet 'black out' earlier this week to demonstrate against the proposed law. They replaced their websites with a black-out page directing users to an information page about the law. Amendments planned for New Zealand's Copyright Act by a Labour Party government that has since been replaced included the insertion of controversial sections 92A and 92C.
  • By: Jillian C. York
    Date: 27 Feb 2009
    The Government's plan to introduce mandatory internet censorship has effectively been scuttled, following an independent senator's decision to join the Greens and Opposition in blocking any legislation required to get the scheme started.

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