Thursday, June 19, 2008

Internet Freedom Alert 1.11

The Internet Freedom Alert is a publication of Freedom House's Global Internet Program, that covers online developments related to censorship, Internet Governance and freedoms online. Issue 1.11 covers developments from June 8 - June 19, 2008. Links, Events and articles mentioned are summarized weekly from the Internet Freedom Bookmarks site - that can be accessed @ http://del.icio.us/internetfreedom

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News

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development today released the OECD Seoul Declaration on the Future of the Internet Economy

Issues

Censorship

Search Monitor Project: Toward a Measure of Transparency

This report interrogates and compares the censorship practices of the search engines provided by Google, Microsoft and Yahoo! for the Chinese market along with the domestic Chinese search engine Baidu. It is based on tests conducted between November 2007 and April 2008 focused on uncovering web sites that have been censored from search engine results.


The report finds that although Internet users in China are able to access more information due to the presence of foreign search engines the web sites that are censored are often the only sources of alternative information available for politically sensitive topics. In addition to censoring the web sites of Chinese dissidents and the Falun Gong movement, the web sites of major news organizations, such as the BBC, as well as international advocacy organizations, such as Human Rights Watch, are also censored.


The data presented in this report indicates that there is not a comprehensive system - such as a list issued by the Chinese government - in place for determining censored content. In fact, the evidence suggests that search engine companies themselves are selecting the specific web sites to be censored raising the possibility of over blocking as well as indicating that there is significant flexibility in choosing how to implement China’s censorship requirements.


Internet and self-regulation in China: the cultural logic of controlled commodification

This article examines the implementation of self-regulation in China's internet sector through the forging of subtler control relationships between media corporations and the state. It uses three case studies of domestic and global media joint venture operations in the converging areas of online and mobile gaming to show how media commercialization is balanced by control modalities to reaffirm the government as a central agency in the gradual transition to a socialist-market economy. Within these processes of controlled commodification, the government uses trust-building to establish cultural leadership as a way of protecting political and social cohesion while benefiting from global economic integration. The study reveals the cultural logic, or hegemonic norm, that underpins the new bottom-up business model for media management in China. Underscoring these processes, however, is a quasi- Sartrean irony of 'winner loses' logic, whereby increased transparency or access to information is limited to entertainment and not a substantially greater say for citizens in the formulation of China's future.


Chinese Internet Research Conference: Getting beyond "Iron Curtain 2.0"

Great summary by Rebecca MacKinnon on last week's Chinese Internet Research Conference held in Hong Kong.


Freedom of Expression


User-generated Censorship

Just as the Web is making it easier for crowds to collaborate, the Web is also making it simple for mobs to crush free expression


Blogger Arrests 2008

World Information Access Project at the University of Washington report on 2008 Blogger Arrests


Governments step up blogger arrests

last year saw a tripling in the number of bloggers arrested around the world compared to 2006, according to a report from the University of Washington.


Authoritarian regimes around the world are dealing with troublesome citizen bloggers by arresting them, and they're doing it more often, according to researchers at the University of Washington. Last year, 2007, was a record year for blogger arrests, with three times as many as in 2006. Egypt, Iran and China are the most dangerous places to blog about political life, accounting for more than half of all arrests since blogging became big,


Blogger arrests hit record high

More bloggers than ever face arrest for exposing human rights abuses or criticising governments, says a report. Citizens have faced arrest and jail for blogging about many different topics, said the World Information Access (WIA) report.


Internet Governance


Domain names users vs domain names registrants

Antony Van Couvering from names@work writes that ICANN’s constituencies are a “bad idea“. He makes some interesting remarks. Among others, he points out that the GNSO includes groups that seem to be redundant (the Business and IP constituencies) and others like domainers which are not representend in the ICANN arena, yet are an integral part of the domain name business.


Privacy


Outsmarting Big Brother-Review-Sunday Specials-Opinion-The Times of India

Ketan Tanna from the Times of India writes a review of the recent Computers, Freedom & Privacy Conference (CFP2008) held in New Haven in May.


Research


Wireless Networking for Communities, Citizens and the Public Interest

Special Issue of The Community Informatics Journal that focuses on Wireless Networking for communities


White Paper on Mobile Web for Social Development

The availability of low-cost mobile phones and the already broad coverage of GSM networks in Developing Countries are a huge opportunity to provide services, based on Information and Communication Technologies (ICT), that would trigger development and improve people’s lives. A first step in that direction has been the apparition, last two years, of numerous success stories using mobile phones in development. However, there is still a gap between the development of few services that demonstrate the proof of concept, and the availability of thousands of services in all Developing Countries of the World. This paper explores this gap, and the potential solution to fill it with the enabling of Mobile Web technologies.


In a first part, the paper revisits the current technologies, mostly SMS, used in the mentioned success stories, and their abilities to scale well. In a second part, we present the strength of Web technologies, the major challenges specific to this context, and some potential directions to address them. In the last part, we introduce a potential program W3C may start to help enabling the next generation of Mobile Web applications for rural communities of the Developing World.


Security


How safe is instant messaging? A security and privacy survey

Declan McCullagh's article on C|Net reviewing the security issues of instant messaging systems.


Popular Photo Sharing Site's DNS Records Hijacked by Turkish Hacking Group

DNS records of one of the most popular photo sharing websites, Photobucket, were hacked yesterday by Turkish Hacking Group. The site returned a hacked page courtesy of the NetDevilz hacking group, a Turkish web site defacement group most widely known for its defacement of the adult video site Redtube earlier this year.


Social Networking


"Must read" free Ofcom report on social networking

Ofcom, the independent regulator and competition authority for the UK communications industries, has just released its first dedicated report on social networking in the UK.


How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media: Working Wikily ....

Working Wikily: How Networks Are Changing Social Change"


Mobiles for Social Development

A blog posting that deals with the pros and cons of using mobiles for social development and linked to the discussions on the future of telecentres and the role of mobiles in complementing and / or supplanting them.


Korea protests a proving ground for gadgets and geeks

When tens of thousands of Koreans converged in the center of Seoul on Tuesday for a mass protest against the new president, many were clutching two vital items: a candle and a mobile phone loaded with snazzy features.


Korea, one of the most wired and technology savvy in the world, the month-long series of gatherings has also been a valuable testing ground for the latest communication devices, gadgets and websites. From high-resolution camera phones to instant broadcasting software and water cannon-resistant camcorders, the latest advances in communications were in evidence during the five weeks since the protests began.


Many demonstrators rely on Internet forums to get information on rallying points, weather forecasts and riot police presence. With powerful camera phones, they are able to shoot photos and videos that they can instantly upload on Internet sites thanks to high-speed wireless technology.


Surveillance

Who's reading your email?

Leading experts share their perspective on email surveillance, and tips on how to keep your inbox secure.

Opinion Articles

Dilemmas of Privacy and Surveillance: Challenges of Technological Change

Advances in technology have the potential to do great good, but they also carry the risk of doing damage if they are introduced without proper care and forethought. One of The UK Royal Academy of Engineering's priorities is to lead debate on matters of engineering by guiding thinking, influencing public policy making and providing a forum for the exchange of ideas. This report is a contribution to the public debate on information technology and its possible impacts on our privacy.


The Future of News: A Golden Age for Free Speech?


Country Reports

North America

Canada

CIRA Creates Backdoor WHOIS Exceptions for Police and IP Owners


The Copyright Protest Surge

In the roughly 36 hours since the Canadian DMCA was introduced, the outrage from thousands of Canadians has been nothing short of remarkable. Nearly 50,000 people have joined the Copyright for Canada Facebook group.


Rogers says its internet interference is necessary, but minimal

Rogers Communications Inc. is defending its control over the flow of internet traffic as necessary but light-handed, amid growing complaints from users and the threat of intervention by regulators


Canadian ISPs Plan Net Censorship

Bell Canada and TELUS, Canada’s two largest Internet service providers (ISPs), will begin charging per-site fees on most Internet sites, reports anonymous sources within TELUS.“It's beyond censorship, it is killing the biggest ecosystem of free expression and freedom of speech that has ever existed,” I Power spokesperson Reese Leysen said. I Power was the first group to report on the possible changes.


United States

The Internet and the 2008 Election

Pew reports that A record-breaking 46% of Americans have used the internet, email or cell phone text messaging to get news about the campaign, share their views and mobilize others


3 Internet Providers Agree to Block Access to Child Pornography

Verizon, Sprint and Time Warner Cable have agreed to block access to Internet bulletin boards and Web sites nationwide that disseminate child pornography.


Three Major ISPs Vow To Fight Child Porn

New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo unveiled landmark agreements on Tuesday with Sprint, Time Warner Cable and Verizon Communications to shutter major sources of online child pornography


New York AG pressures ISPs to cut off Usenet access


Cuomo forces ISP's to block USENET groups / censor websites


Three ISPs Agree To Block Child Porn

Sprint, Time Warner, and Verizon have agreed to block websites and newsgroups containing child pornography. The deal, brokered by New York Attorney General threatened the ISPs with fraud charges


Google Says It Will Support Creation of U.S. Internet Privacy Law


Heavy Internet Users Targeted

Cable service operators Comcast and Time Warner Cable said yesterday that they would begin testing new approaches that would slow Internet access for heavy users and charge more to those who want additional speed.


Congress approves New and Emerging Technologies 911 Improvement Act of 2008


A bill to promote and enhance public safety by facilitating the rapid deployment of IP-enabled 911 and E-911 services, encourage the Nation's transition to a national IP-enabled emergency network, and improve 911 and E-911 access to those with disabilities. Based on information from the FCC, The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates that implementing the bill would cost about $1 million over the 2008-2012 period, assuming availability of the appropriated amounts. CBO expects that enacting the bill would not have a significant effect on direct spending or revenues.



Africa

Rwanda

Rwanda Strives to Become High Technology Hub for Africa

The Rwandan government wants to use advanced information communication technologies, or ICTs, to transform its traditionally agricultural society into what has been dubbed "the Singapore of Africa". Pilot projects to hook schools and clinics up to the internet are already underway, and there is a growing number of telecenters that enable rural people to access the Internet. Cathy Majtenyi reports from Rwanda on the impact of initiatives taken so far and future ICT development plans


Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

Cuba

Castro hits out at Cuban blogger

In a new book about his relationship with Bolivia, the 81-year-old former president criticised Yoani Sanchez, who posts to the Generation Y blog from Havana, although he did not mention her by name. ...


Europe

France

France's Citizens Expected to Help Build Internet Blacklist

The French state and internet service providers have struck a deal to block sites carrying child pornography or content linked to terrorism or racial hatred, Interior Minister Michel Alliot-Marie announced on Tuesday." The article is thin on details, but what it does say is bad enough: "Under the French plan, internet users, via a platform, will be able to signal inappropriate sites and the state, receiving the complaints in real time, will then decide whether the sites are to go on a so-called black list to be passed on to internet service providers to enforce site blocks."


France to block offensive content

France is joining at least five other countries where Internet service providers block access to child pornography and to content linked to terrorism and racial hatred, the French interior minister said Tuesday.


France Censors Internet

France has just joined the ranks of countries like China, Sweden, and Great Britain in blocking its citizens from accessing some content on the internet.


French Government decides to censor the Internet


French to block porn, terror, hate web sites

The French state and Internet service providers have struck a deal to block sites carrying child pornography or content linked to terrorism or racial hatred, Interior Minister Michel Alliot-Marie announced Tuesday.


France to block Internet access to child porn; 'terrorist' sites also face blacklist


Knowing less

Coupled with the story today that French ISPs have agreed to block a wide variety of distasteful content, including hate speech as well as child pornography, today is a day to reflect on possible negative consequences of such an approach


Germany

Telecommunications Scandal: Did Deutsche Telekom Spy on Journalists and Board Members?

German telecommunications giant Deutsche Telekom stands accused of having monitored telephone calls of business journalists, board members and shareholders. An anonymous fax may result in a criminal investigation


Moldova

Destruction of personal computers of 12 young people for posting critical comments online

The Râşcani District Court from the Moldavian capital of Kishinev has ordered the sequestration of personal computers of about 12 young people who expressed critical opinions against the ruling communist party of the Republic of Moldavia on Internet forums and news portals such as forum.md, torrentsmd.com, desteptarea.info and unimedia.md.

Sweden

Swedish National Defense Radio Agency to Wiretap All Internet Traffic

This legislation will allow for the Swedish National Defense Radio Agency (FRA) to wiretap Internet traffic leaving the country.

United Kingdom

A Surveillance Society?

The UK's House of Commons Home Affairs Select Committee has published its report on - A Surveillance Society


Russia and Central Asia

Russia


Moscow court orders closure of critical North Caucasus news website for alleged "extremism"

The Committee to Protect Journalists denounces the repeated efforts by authorities in the southern Russian republic of Ingushetia to shut down the regional news Web site Ingushetiya - one of the few remaining independent news outlets covering the volatile North Caucasus - for alleged extremism.


Turkmenistan


Turkmenistan has begun allowing private citizens to connect to the Internet

Turkmenistan has begun allowing private citizens to connect to the Internet in the latest sign the reclusive Central Asian nation is opening up to the world.



Asia Pacific

Burma

Military authorities renew interrogations of detained blogger

Mizzima News reports that the Burmese military junta authorities are once again questioning blogger Ko Nay Phone Latt, who has been in custody for about five months. He was interrogated twice about his blog without being produced in court, soon after Cyclone Nargis lashed Burma and once more on 15 June 2008.

Cambodia

Editor arrested, charged, radio station ordered to stop broadcasting in run-up to elections

Cambodian rights and free expression advocates are anxious and concerned in the run- up to the general elections scheduled for late July 2008, sounding the alarm over recent attacks on the media that threaten the press and the open conduct of campaigns.


China

The Internet and the Chinese diaspora


China Journal : Chinese Bloggers Really Are Edgy

Western journalists often write about the ability of Chinese bloggers to challenge authority and provide an alternative voice to the propaganda that often fills China’s official news media. How accurate is that ?


HRW Issues Report about Human Rights in China

Human Rights Watch has issued its report to the organization's council expressing special concern about four countries, including China.


Censorship: Time Out Beijing is put in Time Out

Beijing's magazine Time Out Beijing has been banned from distribution by China's censors. The magazine has been targeted by the government as a potential threat to a smooth and safe Olympic games.


Beijing Backtrack on Free Media Angers The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ)

The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) has expressed its anger at new restrictions on media as the Olympic Games approach


Web censorship is failing, says Chinese official

The internet and mobile phones have undermined attempts by China's secretive rulers to control the news, a senior Communist party official admitted today.


The Negative Impact of the Internet and Its Solutions

The Chinese point of view on internet censorship, by Ru Guangrong, of the Chinese Information Center for Defense Science and Technology.


Chinese Police Hold Freelance Journalist Incommunicado

Feng Zhenghu, a Shanghai-based rights defender, online writer and freelance journalist, has been detained in a week that has seen significant backsliding in the climate for freedom of expression in Chin


Huang Qi - Chinese Cyber-Dissident Missing - Presumed Arrested

Reporters without Borders announced it's concerned about the whereabouts of Huang Qi. He's the founder of the Chinese human rights website 64Tianwang, a blog about the Tianaman Square massacre. On Tuesday night Huang was forced into a car by three unknown men in the southwestern Chinese city of Chengdu


Jailing of journalist in line for human rights award condemned


One Online Journalist Arrested, One Missing in Chengdu

Chinese police arrested Internet writer Zeng Hongling in Chengdu for publishing personal accounts of the earthquake on overseas Chinese-language Web sites, according to news reports and a Chinese press freedom advocate


Olympic Visitors' Data Is At Risk; Officials: China Targets Secrets In Laptops, PDAs

National security agencies are warning businesses and federal officials that laptops and e-mail devices taken to the Beijing Olympics are likely to be penetrated by Chinese agents aiming to steal secrets or plant bugs to infiltrate U.S. computer networks.


Glued Geographic

National Geographic magazine dedicated its May issue to China, but some in China had trouble reading it because pages had been glued together.


China's Online Persuaders

China's webspace is infamous for censorship, but increasingly, public relations firms there are helping their clients "manage" online conversations. China-based firms such as Daqi, Chinese Web Union and CIC "charge $500 - $25,000 monthly to monitor postings and squelch negative information or to create positive buzz," reports BusinessWeek. Their clients include Nike, PepsiCo, McDonald's, Toyota and L'Oreal. Chinese Web Union (CWU) "pays thousands of people to write nice things about clients, and it compensates forum leaders who spread positive information and quash bad publicity."


The Struggle to control Information

In this email exchange with four people who have inside perspective on China's censorship in general and Web filtering/blocking in particular, FRONTLINE explores the great battle that's underway in China: In the age of the Internet, can the Communist Party regime maintain its tight control over what information is available to its citizens?



Indonesia

Indonesia has banned foreign-made advertisements and commercials.

The move, which came in a joint decree from the Ministry of Communication and Informatics (Depkominfo) and the ministry of Culture and Tourism (Depbudpar), is intended to boost the Indonesian ad industry. "Advertisements to be shown in Indonesia must use human and natural resources of Indonesia," it said.


Will this affect online ads as well? Will Google Adds be blocked in Indonesia?


Pakistan

Pakistan threatens European embassies

Pakistan has told the European Union that more attacks on EU diplomatic missions abroad cannot be ruled out unless the European Union represses freedom of expression


Pakistan to ask EU to amend laws on freedom of expression

Pakistan will ask the European Union countries to amend laws regarding freedom of expression in order to prevent offensive incidents such as the printing of blasphemous caricatures of Prophet Muhammad


Singapore

Freedom of Expression in Singapore vs. Sri Lanka

Freedom of Speech, Not Freedom From Consequences, an article about the recent controversy on Singapore’s reaction to US Citizen and former Singaporan lawyer Gopolan Nair who was arrested, detained and released on bail for “taunting a Singaporan judge” raises some interesting questions about the freedom of expression.

Thailand

Thailand's Ministry for Information and Communication Technology (MICT) admits blocking 1,893 websites

The last leaked MICT blocklist published by FACT and Wikileaks in advance of the Cybercrime Law clearly shows 17,883 websites were blocked by MICT. ICT bureaucrats have offered wildly differing figures, from as low as 12 up to 2,000

Vietnam

Vietnam 2.0: 'Internet revolution' brings 20 million people online

Excitement over the Internet in Vietnam is such that members of the new wired generation wait in line for hours to surf on PCs installed in cafes throughout the dense city.

Middle East & North Africa (MENA)

Egypt

Defamation case launched against blogger for reporting on environmental pollution is first of its kind

According to Arabic Network for Human Rights Information and the "Mosawah" Association for Human Rights, on 9 June 2008 the Azzohour Court of Port Said is expected to begin reviewing a unique case filed by Trust Chemicals Inc. against blogger Tamer Mabrouk. Tamer Mabrouk is the owner of "The Truth Blog".

The blogger is accused of defamation for posting information that revealed that Trust Chemical had dumped chemicals into Manzallah Lake and the Suez Canal. Tamer Mabrouk also reported on harsh working conditions in the company. These conditions are the reasons behind a recent worker sit-in, where workers asked for access to copies of their contracts and demanded that the company stop firing workers arbitrarily.

Crackdown On Free Expression Continues Amid Demonstrations

The Egyptian authorities have intensified their onslaught on satellite broadcasters and journalists, the latest in a series of attacks against free expression and the free flow of information in a country once at the forefront of press freedom in the Middle East, say IFEX members.

Last week, security forces raided Cairo News Company, a prominent company which leases satellite equipment and services about 40 satellite channels in Egypt, and seized five sets of broadcasting equipment.

Syria

Writer arrested, held incommunicado; blogger given three-year sentence; rights activists on trial, harassed

In May 2008, Syrian authorities detained a political writer, began the trial of two activists, and restricted the travel of at least seven others. Amidst increasing calls in Western countries to increase engagement with Syria, Human Rights Watch urged that an improvement in the treatment of these activists be at the heart of any future talks with the Syrian authorities

Tunisia

Carpe Diem reports that more blogs and websites are now blocked in Tunisia



Recommended Resources


Tracking Genocide by Remote Sensing

The Remote Sensing Project at Yale University’s Genocide Studies Program has just released a 50-page Working Paper entitled “Tracking the Genocide in Darfur: Population Displacement as Recorded by Remote Sensing.”


Internet & Democracy Project Blog


International Journalists' Network

To help connect journalists with the opportunities and information they need to better themselves and raise journalism standards in their countries


STATEWATCH - monitoring the state and civil liberties in Europe


ABA-SIL Human Rights Committee e-Brief Newsletter

The American Bar Association (ABA) Human Rights Committee weekly newsletter - circulated each Monday to approximately 1600 Human Rights Attorneys, activists and educators. To subscribe, visit the URL below or send an email to russell@kerrlawfirm.com

http://w3.abanet.org/abanet/common/email/listserv/listcommands.cfm?parm=subscribe&listgroup=inthumrights

Freenet 0.7 released: Decentralized, anonymous publishing

Freenet is a tool that lets users publish pretty much anything online "without fear of censorship." The software stores your data on a decentralized, anonymous network of nodes made up of other Freenet users' computers


Calls for Proposals

ICANN Calls for Expressions of Interest to Host 2009 Asia Pacific Meeting

ICANN is actively soliciting expressions of interest from organisations seeking to host its Asia Pacific International Public Meeting in 2009.


Upcoming Events

June 21 - 27 : Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) - Public Meeting

Location: Paris, France

http://par.icann.org/

June 26-28: IEEE International Symposium on Technology and Society:University of New Brunswick, Fredericton, Canada

http://www.istas08.ca

ISTAS is the annual symposium of the IEEE Society on Social Implications of Technology. The theme this year is Citizens, Groups, Communities and Information and Communication Technologies

June 27-28: Global Voices Citizen Media Summit 2008

Location: Budapest, Hungary

http://summit08.globalvoicesonline.org/

The event will bring together the members of the Global Voices citizen media project and its wider community with a diverse group of bloggers, activists, technologists, journalists and others persons from around the world, for two days of public discussions and workshops around the theme "Citizen Media & Citizenhood".

June 28 : Grassroots use of Technology Conference

Location: Boston Area (Lowell, MA)

http://organizerscollaborative.org/conference

June 30 - July 1: International Conference on Public Domain in the Digital Age

Location: Leuven-La Neuve, Belgium

http://www.communia-project.eu/conf2008

The main theme is the Assessment of economic and social impact of digital public domain throughout Europe.

July 21-31 : Summer School on Internet Governance

Location: Meissen, Germany

July 23 - 25: Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security (SOUPS)

Location: Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, USA

http://cups.cs.cmu.edu/soups/2008/

This symposium will bring together an interdisciplinary group of researchers and practitioners in human computer interaction, security, and privacy. The program features technical papers, workshops and tutorials, a poster session, panels and invited talks, and discussion sessions.

July 28-30, 08: Cybercitizens: Risks, Rights, and Responsibilities of Participation in the Information Age.

Location: Queenstown, New Zealand

http://www.cybersafety.org.nz/conference08

September 11-13: Oxford e-Research Conference

Location: Oxford University

This multi-disciplinary, international conference on e-Research will be held at the University of Oxford from 11-13 September 2008. It is being organized by a consortium of research projects in association with the journal Information Communication and Society (iCS).

http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk/microsites/eresearch08/

September 26 - 28: The 36th Research Conference on Communication, Information, and Internet Policy

Location: Center for Technology and the Law, George Mason University Law School, Arlington, Virginia

http://www.tprcweb.com/

Octobert 9 - 10: 9th Latin American Congress of Communication Researchers

Location: Mexico City, Mexico

http://alaic.net/alaic30/


October 26 -29 : The Internet: Governance and the Law

Location: Montréal, Québec, Canada

Conference on Internet Policy, regulation and governance, McGill University

Sessions will deal with topics such as Internet Governance beyond the Nation State, Cyber Regulation, Convergence of Telecommunications, PC and Broadcast; Competition; Deregulation; Free Speech vs. Defamation/Hate Speech, Privacy vs. Security; Consumer Protection, Cryptography, Domain Name, Open Source, Patents, Copyright, Trademarks, Cybercrime and Terrorism, E-Commerce, Legal Liability and e-Transactions, Property and Piracy, Telemarketing Fraud et. al.


http://tinyurl.com/6n4pfr

November 2008: Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) - Public Meeting

http://www.icann.org/announcements/announcement-16may08.htm

Cairo, Egypt will host the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers' 33rd International Public Meeting from 2-7 November 2008.

November 8 - 10: VIII International Human Rights Colloquium

"60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights: Challenges for the Global South"

Location: Sao Paulo, Brazil


The VIII International Human Rights Colloquium is an annual capacity building and peer-learning event designed for young activists from the Global South (Africa, Asia and Latin America). The objective of the VIII International Human Rights Colloquium is to strengthen the impact of human rights activists work and to offer the opportunity to build new collaborative networks among activists, academics and the Organization of the United Nations (UN).


http://www.conectas.org/coloquio/


December 2: Third Annual GigaNet Symposium

Location: Hyderabad International Conference Center, India

http://www.igloo.org/giganet

December 3- 6 : United Nations Internet Governance Forum (IGF)

Location: Hyderabad, India

http://www.intgovforum.org/

February 9 - 13, 2009: Informática 2008 - New Technologies: Development and Sovereignty

Location: Havana, Cuba

http://www.informaticahabana.cu


Tuesday, June 17, 2008

New Media - Civic Organizing: Case Studies

New Media: Civil Organization & Challenges

From: netfreedom, 22 hours ago



Presentation given at US Aid Partners meeting - June 2008

SlideShare Link

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Internet Freedom Alert 1.10

The Internet Freedom Alert is a publication of Freedom House's Global Internet Program, that covers online developments related to censorship, Internet Governance and freedoms online. Issue 1.10 covers developments from May 31 - June 8, 2008. Links, Events and articles mentioned are summarized weekly from the Internet Freedom Bookmarks site - that can be accessed @ http://del.icio.us/internetfreedom

The Internet Freedom Alert has a presence on Blogspot, Twitter, Facebook, YouTube Delicious.

To Subscribe to this alert, click - http://ethreemail.com/e3ds/s.php?g=21862acb unsubscribe from this alert, click - http://ethreemail.com/e3ds/u.php?g=21862acb

Request for contributions

The newsletter would like to include your comments, articles and specific cases that could be of interest to the larger community involved in Internet Freedom and Internet Governance. Send contributions to - contact@netfreedom-project.org

Should you wish to publish anonymously or send us a message via a secure communications tool - please let us know - and we'll be happy to make the appropriate arrangements.

Issues

Censorship

Censorship: A Threat to the Stability and Security of the DNS?

Censorship practices by governments and other private actors are becoming more increasingly more sophisticated, and their effects are increasingly being felt globally. A case in point, the YouTube incident in Pakistan was a recent example affecting both users and the DNS at a national and global level. Likely other incidents will occur in the near future. As such, some believe censorship should be considered as a threat to the stability and security of the DNS.


Internet users, as well as experts involved at ICANN and the Internet Governance forum comment and share their opinions.


Freedom of Expression


CPJ releases report on journalist murders worldwide

A new briefing on journalist murders was recently released by the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ). The report, entitled "Dangerous Assignments" details press freedom struggles around the world, and includes CPJ's new Impunity Index


Internet Governance


Internet Governance Forum - The Dynamic Coalition on the Internet Bill of Rights

An informal, open group of organizations, companies, governments and individuals that feel the need to work together for a better definition of the rights and duties of the individual users of the Internet.


Privacy


Facebook "a minefield of privacy invasion"

Facebook is the focus of a new complaint in Canada over its privacy policies and practices. The Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic (CIPPIC) filed the complaint, asking the Privacy Commissioner of Canada to review what the CIPPIC believes are various violations of Canadian privacy law. There are 22 violations in all, says CIPPIC, making Facebook "a minefield of privacy invasion."


Facebook's policies and practices were analyzed by a "team of law students" over the winter, resulting in their discovery of what they believe to be numerous violations of the Canadian Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA).


Security


Alarming Open-Source Security Holes

Back in May 2006, a few programmers working on an open-source security project made a whopper of a mistake. Last week, the full impact of that mistake was just beginning to dawn on security professionals around the world.


Recover Lost Passwords with Free Tools

ACCESS DENIED. Those two bone-chilling words are the last thing you want to see when you're trying to log into a system or open a file, but they're not necessarily a dead end. Several free tools can help you find lost passwords you can't remember or that your computer has saved but obscured.


Electronic Crime Scene Investigation Handbook

Electronic Crime Scene Investigation: A Guide for First Responders, Second Edition, National Institute of Justice, U.S. Department of Justice, April 2008.


Opinion Articles

No signal: The mobile phone refuseniks

We chat, we text, we roam and we run up huge bills. Most of us couldn't imagine life without them. But there remain a smattering of rebels who refuse to adopt mobile phones. Why do they resist? And how on earth do they manage?


Ofcom report on social networking

Ofcom, the independent regulator and competition authority for the UK communications industries, has just released its first dedicated report on social networking in the UK.



Country Reports

North America

Canada

Digital Advocacy

Michael Geist's excellent presentation at the recent Toronto MESH conference on Digital Advocacy


Federal privacy commissioner launches Facebook probe

The Canadian federal privacy commissioner has launched an investigation into Facebook after University of Ottawa law students complained the site breaches Canadian law by disclosing personal information to advertisers without obtaining proper consent. The students, some who are dedicated Facebook users, allege in a complaint lodged Friday that the popular social networking website has committed 22 violations of the law.


United States

Crossing Borders with Laptops and PDAs

Last month a US court ruled that border agents can search your laptop, or any other electronic device, when you're entering the country. They can take your computer and download its entire contents, or keep it for several days


White House opposition likely dooms The Global Internet Freedom Act (GOFA)

Declan McCulagh from CNET reports of that both the US Department of Justice as well as the State department is opposing the legislation written by Republican Rep. Chris Smith that would slap extensive regulations on technology companies doing business in China and other nations deemed to be unreasonably "Internet-restricting."


Freedom House Urges Vote on Global Online Freedom Act

Freedom House urges the United States House of Representatives to adopt a bill that would help American technology companies resist pressure to cooperate with repressive regimes.

In a letter Tuesday, Freedom House called on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to bring the Global Online Freedom Act (GOFA), HR 275, to a vote on the floor of the House. The bill is critical to U.S. efforts to combat internet censorship and to promote freedom of expression worldwide.


CDT crafting internet policy agenda

The Center for Democracy and Technology unveiled a draft document on Thursday that lays out the think tank's Internet and technology policy recommendations for the next administration and Congress


Africa

South Africa

South African Men Jailed, Three Months For Possessing Broadcasting Equipment

Three South African men arrested on a Zimbabwean highway and found in possession of "illegal" television equipment bearing logos of Britain's Sky television were jailed for six months .


Rwanda

Rwanda Strives to Become High Technology Hub for Africa

The Rwandan government wants to use advanced information communication technologies, or ICTs, to transform its traditionally agricultural society into what has been dubbed "the Singapore of Africa"


Zimbabwe


Media in Zimbabwe

A senior Zimbabwean journalist has launched a website for those reporters who write about the country and its newsmakers during these critical times: MediaInZimbabwe.com.


Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

Cuba

An encounter with Yoani Sanchez in Havana

Alex Boyd's interview with noted and award recipient Cuban blogger Yoani Sanchez.



Europe

Germany

German telecom charged with spying on journalists

Last week the German news weekly Der Spiegel revealed that it had obtained documents showing that Deutsche Telekom had hired an independent contractor to "analyze several hundred thousand landline and mobile connection data sets of key German journalists reporting on Telekom and their private contacts." The surveillance programs, which purportedly sought to identify leaks by cross-referencing call records with published articles containing confidential company information, are said to have been code-named "Clipper" and "Rheingold." German prosecutors announced that they have launched an investigation into the charges.


Netherlands


Dutch PVV wants independent blogging censorship

The Dutch PVV (Freedom Party) led by right wing Islamic critic Geert Wilders is proposing that the Dutch Indymedia and the left wing online zine Ravage be banned, as a response to the protests against the recent illegal Amsterdam squat eviction.


Sweden


Sweden's Draconian wiretap bill

If a bill before parliament becomes law, the country's National Defence Radio Establishment (FRA) will monitor all internet traffic that passes in or out of the country.



Asia Pacific

Burma


Junta fails to see the funny side of comic's stand for cyclone victims

The Burmese junta has further dismayed its critics by arresting the Burmese dissident comedian Zarganar and halting his rescue works


Cambodia

Cambodian Bloggers / Personal Information Technology Workshop

A group of Cambodian Bloggers who experienced in using the Internet for study and work are trying to share our experiences to other friends by organizing a workshop called : Personal Information Technology Workshop.


The workshop, planned to be held in some 20 universities in Phnom Penh. The purpose of the workshop is to introduce university students the cutting-edge personal information technology such as email, online search engine, social network sites, online documentations, chat and call services, Khmer Open Software and personal web blog. According to the time limit, the first part of the workshop aims to give participants the idea of what they could do on the web to enjoy, make friends and learn mostly for free as they could spend their time at their university computer lab.


China

China's Emerging Environmental Movement

Quietly and somewhat surprisingly, green groups are cropping up throughout China and are starting to have an impact


Facebook eyes China, but challenges loom

Facebook has indicated that it plans to speed up its move into China dramatically, inviting English-speaking users of the site to help translate the site into Chinese.


Analysts said, however, that the networking site faces enormous challenges gaining a foothold in the lucrative Asian market - in the form of local competitors, a stricter regulatory framework and cultural differences which suggest the Chinese may be less willing to embrace the site.


China's Great Leap: The Beijing Games and Olympian Human Rights Challenges (Paperback)


This book is unique in that it comprises contributions from two Pulitzer Prize winners, eminent experts on topics ranging from Chinese law to Olympic history, and perhaps most importantly, courageous Chinese human rights advocates who have been jailed for their beliefs. One contributor, Bao Tong, is still confined to house arrest in Beijing. The hauntingly beautiful photo essay is a moving tribute to the migrant workers who literally built the Chinese government's Olympic dream, and to the ordinary Chinese citizens who have paid a high price for the realization of this dream. China's Great Leap is essential reading for anyone who wishes to see the Chinese people emerge as the true winners of the Beijing Games.


Chinese bloggers slip censors' net to attack smiling party boss

Angry Chinese internet users have launched an online campaign against an official in the earthquake zone who is accused of grinning too much in the midst of the disaster.


Censors have moved slowly to silence the unusually critical debate on blogs and community bulletin boards about Tan Li, the Communist Party chief of Mianyang, and what many see as his inappropriate smile. Websites show four pictures of Li, apparently beaming, as he escorts President Hu Jintao around his town and conducts other duties. As well as being disrespectful, critics say the local party boss was negligent in his slow response to the disaster.


China's Olympics Guide: Do's And Don'ts For Foreigners

With China expecting an enormous influx of foreigners for the 2008 Olympics, they've helpfully issued an Olympics guide, which is filled with a wide range of do's and don'ts for incoming foreigners


Singapore


Another Singapore Blogger Arrested - Restrictions Follow Critics to Cyberspace

While Singapore’s restrictions on the media are no surprise to anyone, the ongoing legal action against a foreign blogger who criticised the country’s justice system has raised fears that these tight controls are now being pushed into what has so far been a freer environment -- cyberspace.


On Jun. 2, U.S. blogger Gopalan Nair, who used to be a Singaporean citizen, became the first foreign blogger to be arrested and charged with "threatening, abusing or insulting a public servant" -- a High Court judge. His trial was scheduled to start Friday


Thailand

Net slowdowns suggest Govt is monitoring traffic

Thailand's Internet is stuttering with a series of unexplained outages and slowdowns that suggest that the government is running a far-reaching programme to monitor its citizens' online activities



Middle East & North Africa (MENA)

Maghreb Civil Society Portal

A Maghreb Civil Society Portal launched by The Forum des Alternatives Maroc Association in partnership with Oxfam Novib and Alternatives


Egypt

Blogger Kareem El Beheiry released

Egyptian blogger Kareem El Beheiry has been released yesterday from prison. Kareem was arrested by Egyptian police in connection with the April 6th strike in support of the textile workers in Mahalla City.


Egypt blogger freed after 'weeks of torture'

AFP reports that a blogger released after weeks behind bars over deadly protests at Egypt's biggest textile plant for higher pay and controls on prices, said Monday he and his fellow detainees suffered weeks of "torture".


Egypt's Facebook showdown - The online gathering place for young people poses a challenge to authorities.

Right now, the government of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak is considering blocking Facebook, the social networking website that has become a popular hangout for twentysomethings worldwide and a favorite venue for Egypt's disaffected youth.


Is it time to sign out of Facebook ?

A computer technician who works for an Egyptian ISP and who preferred to remain anonymous confirms that ISPs block websites by blocking the Domain Name Service (which changes human-readable website names into computer-readable IP addresses).


Great Firewall of China Coming Soon

Egyptian bloggers have one hand on their keyboard and another on their hearts. Following a recent crackdown on bloggers and online activists following the April 6 unrest, some are now predicting the worse is yet to come.


Fall ICANN meeting to be held in Cairo, 2-6 Nov 2008

The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers will hold its 33rd International Public Meeting to be held in Cairo from 2-6 November 2008. The meeting will include a at-large summit, one that aims to bring voices of internet users from around the world to the meeting.


Iran

Iran's blogosphere, inside and out

Iran is far from a free and open society, but apparently its control of the Internet is not as pervasive as one might think


Israel

Israeli Knesset outlaws unsolicited spam, SMS, auto-callers

Advertisers who send unwanted solicitations by telephone, text messages (SMS), e-mail (spam) or fax may be fined as much as NIS 200,000, according to a bill the Knesset approved Wednesday. The new law takes effect in six months


Jordan

Jordan Watch

An update and analysis of socio-economic changes in Jordan from a social democratic perspective.


Palestinian Territories


Palestinians pin their hopes on high-tech

The Associated Press has an interesting article today on the fledgling Palestinian high tech industry and how it could one day drive the territories' sluggish economy.


Tunisia

Censorship in Tunisia

Website that documents and campaigns for a internet freedom in Tunisia


Saudi Arabia


Saudi blog censored

A young man in Saudi Arabia reports that the site of Fouad al Farhan, the Saudi blogger jailed last year, is again blocked



Recommended Resources

CircleID

CircleID is an online community where professionals come to connect, inform and be informed about the latest developments that are shaping the Internet infrastructure.


Postings on CircleID involve all aspects of the Internet's core development including technical, security, legal, policy and regulatory matters. All Postings showcased on CircleID originate from thousands of professionals around the world who are active within these fields.


Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations (Hardcover)


Clay Shirky is a leading thinker on social technologies, and this book is his introduction to why social technologies like Wikipedia work. Each chapter has a well-chosen story to illustrate the technologies he's discussing, from the Stolen Sidekick page to Flickr's coverage of Coney Island's Mermaid Parade, and how they are being used, including Egyptian activists using Twitter to keep each other updated of their activities and confrontations with authority, or Belarussian protestors using LiveJournal to organize flash mobs.


Shirky's book is a terrific introduction to social technology, with an overview of both the social and the technological and how they are feeding on each other to form new combinations. Highly recommended to anybody who has any interest in how new tools are giving us more power by multiplying the number of ways in which people can interact with each other.



The International Journalists' Network (IJNet)

The International Journalists' Network (IJNet) is the world’s premier resource for the media assistance community. It is an online service for journalists, media managers, media assistance professionals, journalism trainers and educators, or anyone else with an interest in news media around the world.


IJNet's mission is to connect journalists with the opportunities and information they need to better themselves and raise journalism standards in their countries. Hand-in-hand with that mission, IJNet strives to track media training and other assistance efforts in more than 150 countries, helping donors and organizers avoid duplication and learn about innovative programs around the world. IJNet is published by the International Center for Journalists (ICFJ) in Washington, D.C


Observatorio para la CiberSociedad / The Cyberspace observatory

The Cyberspace observatory is a point of encounter, discussion and publication for researchers who are studying the intersection of social aspects of new information and communications technologies (Website is in Spanish)


Upcoming Events

June 13 -14 : Sixth annual China Internet Research Conference - "China and the Internet: Myths and Realities

Location: University of Hong Kong

http://jmsc.hku.hk/blogs/circ

Conference co-organized and hosted by the Journalism and Communication at the Chinese University of Hong Kong

June 12 - 13: USAID Democracy and Governance: 2008 Partners Conference

Location: Washington, DC, USA

The confernce will provide an opportunity for participants to exchange innovative approaches to DG programming, while exploring how whole-of-government efforts can best be brought to bear to promote democracy and the effectiveness of partner governments


http://www.usaid.gov/our_work/democracy_and_governance/08partner_conference/index.html

June 21 - 27 : Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) - Public Meeting

Location: Paris, France

http://par.icann.org/

June 26-28: IEEE International Symposium on Technology and Society:University of New Brunswick, Fredericton, Canada

http://www.istas08.ca

ISTAS is the annual symposium of the IEEE Society on Social Implications of Technology. The theme this year is Citizens, Groups, Communities and Information and Communication Technologies

June 27-28: Global Voices Citizen Media Summit 2008

Location: Budapest, Hungary

http://summit08.globalvoicesonline.org/

The event will bring together the members of the Global Voices citizen media project and its wider community with a diverse group of bloggers, activists, technologists, journalists and others persons from around the world, for two days of public discussions and workshops around the theme "Citizen Media & Citizenhood". The Summit will feature several panels on matters relating to censorship and online freedom of speech. It will be devoted to discuss the challenges facing freedom of expression and debate the state of censorship and anti-censorship efforts in the world.

June 28 : Grassroots use of Technology Conference

Location: Boston Area (Lowell, MA)

http://organizerscollaborative.org/conference

June 30 - July 1: International Conference on Public Domain in the Digital Age

Location: Leuven-La Neuve, Belgium

http://www.communia-project.eu/conf2008

The main theme is the Assessment of economic and social impact of digital public domain throughout Europe.

July 21-31 : Summer School on Internet Governance

Location: Meissen, Germany

July 23 - 25: Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security (SOUPS)

Location: Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, USA

http://cups.cs.cmu.edu/soups/2008/

This symposium will bring together an interdisciplinary group of researchers and practitioners in human computer interaction, security, and privacy. The program features technical papers, workshops and tutorials, a poster session, panels and invited talks, and discussion sessions.

July 28-30, 08: Cybercitizens: Risks, Rights, and Responsibilities of Participation in the Information Age.

Location: Queenstown, New Zealand

http://www.cybersafety.org.nz/conference08

September 11-13: Oxford e-Research Conference

Location: Oxford University

This multi-disciplinary, international conference on e-Research will be held at the University of Oxford from 11-13 September 2008. It is being organized by a consortium of research projects in association with the journal Information Communication and Society (iCS).

http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk/microsites/eresearch08/

September 26 - 28: The 36th Research Conference on Communication, Information, and Internet Policy

Location: Center for Technology and the Law, George Mason University Law School, Arlington, Virginia

http://www.tprcweb.com/

Octobert 9 - 10: 9th Latin American Congress of Communication Researchers - The state of media and society in Latin America

Location: Mexico City, Mexico

http://alaic.net/alaic30/


October 26 -29 : The Internet: Governance and the Law

Location: Montréal, Québec, Canada

Conference on Internet Policy, regulation and governance, McGill University

Sessions will deal with topics such as Internet Governance beyond the Nation State, Cyber Regulation, Convergence of Telecommunications, PC and Broadcast; Competition; Deregulation; Free Speech vs. Defamation/Hate Speech, Privacy vs. Security; Consumer Protection, Cryptography, Domain Name, Open Source, Patents, Copyright, Trademarks, Cybercrime and Terrorism, E-Commerce, Legal Liability and e-Transactions, Property and Piracy, Telemarketing Fraud et. al.


http://tinyurl.com/6n4pfr

November 2008: Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) - Public Meeting

http://www.icann.org/announcements/announcement-16may08.htm

Cairo, Egypt will host the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers' 33rd International Public Meeting from 2-7 November 2008.

November 8 - 10: VIII International Human Rights Colloquium

"60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights: Challenges for the Global South"

Location: Sao Paulo, Brazil


The VIII International Human Rights Colloquium is an annual capacity building and peer-learning event designed for young activists from the Global South (Africa, Asia and Latin America). The objective of the VIII International Human Rights Colloquium is to strengthen the impact of human rights activists work and to offer the opportunity to build new collaborative networks among activists, academics and the Organization of the United Nations (UN).


http://www.conectas.org/coloquio/


December 2: Third Annual GigaNet Symposium

Location: Hyderabad International Conference Center, India

http://www.igloo.org/giganet

December 3- 6 : United Nations Internet Governance Forum (IGF)

Location: Hyderabad, India

http://www.intgovforum.org/

February 9 - 13, 2009: Informática 2008 - New Technologies: Development and Sovereignty

Location: Havana, Cuba

http://www.informaticahabana.cu