The
internet is a strange beast. Many of us use it every day - not
just when sitting in front of a computer, but every time when
using a credit card, filling fuel, sending an SMS, taking a flight
- in short just about every modern activity depends on the internet.
The use of the internet is spreading everywhere, even to the most
surprising places - some farmers in India receive current market
prices for their crops on internet enabled cellphones, and the
early warning system for tsunamis being developed after the 2004
ocean quake works through the internet.
Internet censorship is spreading rapidly,
being practised by about two dozen countries and applied to a
far wider range of online information and applications. A six-month
investigation into whether 40 countries use censorship shows the
practice is spreading, with new countries learning from experienced
practitioners such as China and benefitting from technological
improvements.
New censorship techniques include barring
of complete applications, such as China's block on Wikipedia or
Pakistan's ban on Google's blogging service, and the use of more
advanced technologies such as "keyword filtering", which
is used to track down material by identifying sensitive words.
Recently, Turkish court ordered the blocking of YouTube to silence
offensive comments about Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of
modern Turkey, marking the most visible attack yet on a website
that has been widely adopted around the world. Methods such as
these are being copied as countries new to censorship learn from
those with more experience.
Act to Combat
Many of the top universities in the world
such as Duke, Stanford, MIT, Harvard and Princeton have set up
such proxy systems to enable users around the world to bypass
censorship. Besides universities and individuals acting on their
own to protect the freedom of speech, there are many government
and privately-funded projects set up specifically for the purpose
of allowing users to bypass any form of internet censorship. The
rise of peer to peer networking means that every single computer,
even home PCs formerly not thought of as servers, can be used
to serve up content to any other PC.
China spends billions of dollars, and employs
over 40,000 full-time government employees in Beijing alone, to
monitor and restrict Chinese usage of the internet. The Chinese
government tries to control and restrict access to a wide variety
of topics, such as the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, Falun
Gong, Tibet, Taiwan, pornography or democracy. Despite the most
sophisticated filtering system in the world, China has failed
miserably at its attempt to censor the internet.
The second, slightly harder to bypass form
of censorship, as implemented in China, is to have a list of banned
words, and censor those on the fly. As users in China request
a web page, the incoming page is first inspected by government
servers, and blocked if a banned term like democracy is present
on that page. Human censors are also actively looking at what
people browse on the internet, and actively block websites as
they see fit. This method is also easily bypassed by connecting
to a proxy server which scrambles the page as it sends it to you.
The internet was designed from the ground
up to resist damage - and censorship is just another form of damage
to the internet. If the data doesn't make it through to its destination,
then another route will be automatically tried, until all possible
routes are exhausted. So if one computer, or a whole bunch of
them, decides to block certain types of data, then they will be
automatically bypassed. While internet censors are learning to
apply new technologies to expand their efforts, activists wanting
to circumvent the controls are using the latest internet methods
to advantage.
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