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Internet censorship: protecting people from the truth

Wayne Madsen | 12.12.2005 04:58


December 9, 2005 -- Internet censorship. It did not happen overnight but slowly came to America's shores from testing grounds in China and the Middle East.
Progressive and investigative journalist web site administrators are beginning to talk to each other about it, e-mail users are beginning to understand why their e-mail is being disrupted by it, major search engines appear to be complying with it, and the low to equal signal-to-noise ratio of legitimate e-mail and spam appears to be perpetuated by it.

December 9, 2005 -- Internet censorship. It did not happen overnight but slowly came to America's shores from testing grounds in China and the Middle East.
Progressive and investigative journalist web site administrators are beginning to talk to each other about it, e-mail users are beginning to understand why their e-mail is being disrupted by it, major search engines appear to be complying with it, and the low to equal signal-to-noise ratio of legitimate e-mail and spam appears to be perpetuated by it.

In this case, “it,” is what privacy and computer experts have long warned about: massive censorship of the web on a nationwide and global scale. For many years, the web has been heavily censored in countries around the world. That censorship continues at this very moment. Now it is happening right here in America. The agreement by the Congress to extend an enhanced Patriot Act for another four years will permit the political enforcers of the Bush administration, who use law enforcement as their proxies, to further clamp censorship controls on the web.


The warning signs for the crackdown on the web have been with us for over a decade. The Clipper chip controversy of the 90s, John Poindexter’s Total Information Awareness (TIA) system pushed in the aftermath of 9-11, backroom deals between the Federal government and the Internet service industry, and the Patriot Act have ushered in a new era of Internet censorship, something just half a decade ago computer programmers averred was impossible given the nature of the web. They were wrong, dead wrong.

Take for example of what recently occurred when two journalists were taking on the phone about a story that appeared on Google News. The story was about a Christian fundamentalist move in Congress to use U.S. military force in Sudan to end genocide in Darfur. The story appeared on the English Google News site in Qatar. But the very same Google News site when accessed simultaneously in Washington, DC failed to show the article. This censorship is accomplished by geolocation filtering: the restriction or modifying of web content based on the geographical region of the user. In addition to countries, such filtering can now be implemented for states, cities, and even individual IP addresses.

With reports in the Swedish newspaper Svensa Dagbladet today that the United States has transmitted a Homeland Security Department "no fly" list of 80,000 suspected terrorists to airport authorities around the world, it is not unreasonable that a "no [or restricted] surfing/emailing" list has been transmitted to Internet Service Providers around the world. The systematic disruptions of web sites and email strongly suggests that such a list exists.

News reports on CIA prisoner flights and secret prisons are disappearing from Google and other search engines like Alltheweb as fast as they appear. Here now, gone tomorrow is the name of the game.

Google is systematically failing to list and link to articles that contain explosive information about the Bush administration, the war in Iraq, Al Qaeda, and U.S. political scandals. But Google is not alone in working closely to stifle Internet discourse. America On Line, Microsoft, Yahoo and others are slowly turning the Internet into an information superhighway dominated by barricades, toll booths, off-ramps that lead to dead ends, choke points, and security checks.

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 http://www.axisoflogic.com/artman/publish/article_20323.shtml

Wayne Madsen

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had me going there..

12.12.2005 09:13

Thought this article when i saw it was refering to Indymedia!

jimbo


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Utter and complete rubbish

12.12.2005 09:42

Utter nonsence from begining to end. Even a basic understanding of the Internet, its structure and the coding behind Google and other search engines would make you understand the stupidity of your post.

Articles like this damge the far more important work being done to enable full internet access into countries like China North Korea and Cuba. Posts like this enable those who are really preventing information from reaching their citizens from claiming "O look the West does it as well"

hacker


George Robertson is a wanker

13.12.2005 15:46

Filtering occurs at virtually every hop whether intentional or not, this is a military-designed comm's system that we are talking over after all.

Jimbo, not to worry you, but it's interesting how many articles that are deleted on this IM site for breach of guidelines are still on other IM sites, and doubtless vice versa. The posters decision to post poetry or comment or such to more than one IM site is peculiar, although some news should obviously be spread around. The IM volunteers decision what breaks guidelines and what doesn't will vary greatly the more people have to make more choices, and that'd be true even for a internal corporate system. On a non-heirarchial collection of sites like Im, it's bound to vary more.

Censorship can be imposed on the internet in various technical ways, but also in the traditional ways. The predominantly anti-war Sunday Herald forum was closed down when the NATO chief George Robertson after some new poster made an allegation of him being involved in kiddie-sex and the Dunblane massacre, even though that post was removed when he contacted them to complain. He got £600,000 in damages or something, and for all anyone knows could've paid the new poster to have posted the comments and planned the whole thing.

I'd like him to sue me for calling him a war-criminal, a class traitor and a self-serving greedy ugly wanker, I think I'll put up a sign to that effect where he lives.

Danny


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