Internet censorship

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Countries where the free flow of information is restricted. Source: RWB
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Countries where the free flow of information is restricted. Source: RWB
Part of the series on
Censorship

By region

Australia
Bhutan
Canada
P. R. China
Taiwan (R.O.C.)
East Germany
France
Germany
India
Iran
Republic of Ireland
Pakistan
Samoa
Singapore
South Asia
Soviet Union
Thailand (Radio and film)
United Kingdom
United States

By media

Advertisements
Books
Films (banned|re-edited)
Internet
Music
Anime
Video games

Other

Self-censorship
Book burning
Content-control software
Corporate censorship
Under fascist regimes
In religion
Historical revisionism
Postal censorship
Prior restraint
Tape delay
Whitewashing

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Internet censorship is control or suppression of material an individual can publish or access on the Internet. The legal issues are similar to offline censorship.

One difference is that national borders are more permeable online: residents of a country that bans certain information can find it on websites hosted outside the country. Conversely, attempts by one government to prevent its citizens from seeing certain material can have the effect of restricting foreigners, because the government may take action against Internet sites anywhere in the world, if they host objectionable material.

Total censorship of information on the Internet, however, is very difficult (or impossible) to achieve due to the underlying distributed technology of the Internet. Pseudonymity and data havens (such as Freenet) allow unconditional free speech, as the technology guarantees that material cannot be removed and the author of any information is impossible to link to a physical identity or organization.

Contents

[edit] Censorship by governments

[edit] Pervasive

While there is no universally agreed upon definition of what constitutes "pervasive censorship," organizations such as Reporters without Borders and the Open Net Initiative identify some nations as practicing extreme levels of Internet censorship. Such nations often censor political content and may retaliate with methods such as imprisonment against citizens that violate the censorship.

  • People's Republic of China
The People's Republic of China blocks or filters Internet content relating to Tibetan independence, Taiwan independence, police brutality, the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, freedom of speech, democracy, pornography, some international news sources (such as the BBC), certain religious movements (such as Falun Gong), many blogging websites, and Wikipedia.[1] Some 62 cyber dissidents are reportedly imprisoned in China for their online postings.[2]
  • Vietnam
The main networks in Vietnam prevent access to websites critical of the Vietnamese government, expatriate political parties, and international human rights organizations, among others.[1] Online police reportedly monitor Internet cafes and cyber dissidents have been imprisoned for advocating democracy.[3]
  • Iran
Internet censorship in Iran is delegated to ISPs who attempt to filter content critical of the government, homosexual websites, women's rights websites, and blogs.[1] Iranian bloggers have been imprisoned for their Internet activities by the Iranian government.[4] Most recently, the Iranian government has blocked access to video-upload cites such as YouTube.com [5]
  • Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan prevents access to websites regarding banned Islamic movements, independent media, NGOs, and material critical of the government's human rights violations.[1] Some Internet cafes in the capital have posted warnings that users will be fined for viewing pornographic websites or website containing banned political material.[6]
  • Tunisia
Tunisia has blocked thousands of websites (such as pornography, mail, search engine cached pages, online documents conversion and translation services) and peer-to-peer and FTP transfer. This filtering is performed using a transparent proxy and port blocking. Cyber dissidents including pro-democracy lawyer Mohammed Abbou have been jailed by the Tunisian government for their online activities.[7]
  • Syria
Syria has banned websites for political reasons and arrested people accessing them.[1][8]
  • Myanmar
Myanmar has banned the websites of political opposition groups, sites relating to human rights, and organizations promoting democracy in Myanmar.[1]
  • Maldives
Maldives filters opposition websites and has imprisoned cyber dissidents.[9][10]
  • Cuba
Cuba has dozens of public domestic computer networks plus hundreds of “local,” “closed,” or “private” networks. E-mail is available to thousands of individual users associated with institutions that have been assigned e-mail accounts.[11]Access to internet services by the Cuban population are limited due to high costs and the slow pace of internet growth.[12]
  • North Korea
Only a few thousand citizens in North Korea, a tiny minority of the total population, have access to the Internet, which is heavily censored by the national government.[13]

[edit] Substantial

Censorship in the United Arab Emirates
Enlarge
Censorship in the United Arab Emirates
  • South Korea
South Korea has banned at least 31 pro-North Korea websites through the use of IP blocking.[1]
  • Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia directs all international Internet traffic through a proxy farm located in King Abdulaziz City for Science & Technology. Content filter is implemented there, based on software by Secure Computing.[14] Additionally, a number of sites are blocked according to two lists maintained by the Internet Services Unit (ISU)[1]: one containing "immoral" (mostly pornographic) sites, the other based on directions from a security committee run by the Ministry of Interior (including sites critical of the Saudi government). An interesting feature of this system is that citizens are encouraged to actively report "immoral" sites for blocking, using a provided Web form. The legal basis for content filtering is the resolution by Council of Ministers dated 12 February 2001 [2]. According to a study carried out in 2004 by the OpenNet Initiative: The most aggressive censorship focused on pornography, drug use, gambling, religious conversion of Muslims, and filtering circumvention tools.[3]
  • United Arab Emirates
The United Arab Emirates forcibly censors the Internet using Secure Computing's solution. The nation's sole ISP Etisalat bans pornography, politically sensitive material, and anything against the moral values of the UAE.
  • Yemen
Yemen's two ISPs block access to content falling under the categories of gambling, adult content, and sex education as well as material seeking to convert Muslims to other religions.[1]

[edit] Nominal/Watchlist

  • United States
The United States of America enacted in 1996 the Communications Decency Act, which severely restricted online speech that could potentially be seen by a minor – which, it was argued, was most of online speech. Free speech advocates, however, managed to have most of the act overturned by the courts. The Digital Millennium Copyright Act criminalizes the discussion and dissemination of technology that could be used to circumvent copyright protection mechanisms, and makes it easier to act against alleged copyright infringement on the Internet. Many school districts in the United States frequently censor material deemed inappropriate for the school setting. Opponents may use the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution (the freedom of speech) to argue how legal it is to censor the Internet.

[15]

  • India
As of July 2006 the Indian government has directed ISPs to block seventeen websites, including some hosted on the Geocities, Blogspot and Typepad domains. Initial implementation difficulties led to these domains being blocked entirely.[16][17] Access to sites on these domains other than the specifically banned ones was restored by most ISPs after about a week.[18] The first documented incident of Internet censorship in India was the Yahoo! Groups ban of 23 September 2003. Kynhun, a Yahoo! group linked to the outlawed "Hynniewtrep National Liberation Council", a minor separatist group, was ordered banned by the Department of Telecommunications. Difficulties in implementing the ban by the ISP's ultimately led to all Yahoo! groups being banned for a period of about two weeks.
  • Brazil
In Brazil, the state of São Paulo was the first state to enact an act requiring cybercafés to keep a user's list with address, full name, date of birth, phone number, and an identity card number.[4]
A law project made by Senator Eduardo Azeredo said that all internet traffic must be recorded and maintained for 5 years and all people that want access the Internet by any way must show his IDs and give personal information, like address, telephone number, RG and CPF. The law project also prohibits all methods of Internet anonymity and proxying, and creates technological difficulty and barriers. It also prohibits the possession, transport or giving away without authorization data or information that came from any communication device or computing system. More information can be found (in Portuguese) at OpenBrasil[5].
  • Chile
At the moment a project of law is in debate presented/displayed by a group of deputies, who proposes that some activities are illegal in Internet. One of the best points than this law it proposes that some things are illegal only in Internet, since they are not at the moment illegal in any other means. Also one has alleged recently that diverse universities, private companies and state offices are blocking the access to diverse websites like Flickr, Fotolog, Wordpress-based sites, independent media sites, websites pro-2006 student protests in Chile, Blogspot-based sites and others being that Chile is considerated the leader liberal country in talks about Internet policies. Also there have been complaints on the part of diverse people by the censorship who apply diverse companies like El Mercurio Internet or EMOL which they censure commentaries of his weblogs that go against their publishing line. Last Telefonica Chile has been alleged that this blocking the use of services like Skype in favor for their services. Also VTR, the largest broadband service provider where doing the same with GMail and Hotmail.
  • Russia
Russia pressured Lithuania into shutting down the Kavkaz-Center website, a site that reports on the Second Chechen War.[1]
  • United Kingdom
United Kingdom, the new Home Office Minister Vernon Coaker set a deadline of the end of 2007 for all ISPs to implement a “Cleanfeed”-style network level content blocking platform. Currently, the only web sites ISPs are expected to block access to are sites the Internet Watch Foundation has identified as containing images of child abuse. However such a platform is capable of blocking access to any web site added to the list (at least, to the extent that the implementation is effective), making it a simple matter to change this policy in future. The Home Office has previously indicated that it has considered requiring ISPs to block access to articles on the web deemed to be “glorifying terrorism”, within the meaning of the new Terrorism Act 2006. [6] (See Censorship in the United Kingdom, Internet censorship.)
  • Australia
  • Pakistan
Pakistan has blocked access to websites critical of the government. Currently, the government has blocked blogs hosted on Blogspot.com. A ban on pornographic websites has also been enacted.
  • Morocco
As of March 2006, Morrocco had blocked access to many blogging sites, such as LiveJournal.

Reporters Without Borders says that Morocco now censors all political websites advocating Western Sahara's independence.

  • Denmark
Denmark's biggest Internet service provider TDC A/S launched a DNS-based child pornography filter on October 18, 2005 in cooperation with the state police department and Save the Children, a charity organisation. Since then, all major providers have joined and as of May 2006, 98% of the Danish Internet users are restricted by the filter.[19] The filter caused some controversy in march 2006, when a legal sexsite named bizar.dk was caught in the filter, sparking discussion about the reliability, accuracy and credibility of the filter.[20]
  • Norway
Norway's major Internet service providers have a DNS filter which blocks access to sites authorities claim are known to provide child pornography, similar to Denmark's filter.
  • Sweden
Sweden's major Internet service providers have a DNS filter which blocks access to sites authorities claim are known to provide child pornography, similar to Denmark's filter.
  • Finland
Finland's major Internet service providers decided 22.11.2006 to begin to filter child pornography, but filter isn't implemented yet. Blacklist is provided by finnish police and filtering is propably uri based like United Kingdom's Cleanfeed.
  • France
French courts demanded Yahoo! block Nazi material in the case LICRA vs. Yahoo. The case is currently on appeal for an en banc rehearing.
  • Singapore
In Singapore, three people were arrested and charged with sedition for posting racist comments on the Internet, of which two have been sentenced to imprisonment.
  • Thailand
Significant efforts have been made in Thailand to oppose sites that are representing illegal activities. Activities such as gambling, drug usage and pornography are strictly banned, using DNS control in Thailand and, more effectively, a transparent proxy. This makes the website appear to be inaccessible. Also, the government has banned sites that discuss circumventing Internet censorship.
  • Italy
Italy bans the use of foreign bookmakers over the Internet by mandating certain edits to DNS host files of Italian ISPs.[7] [8]

[edit] Bypassing Internet blocking

[edit] Psiphon

Psiphon software will allow Internet blocked countries such as China to access Wikipedia. "We're aiming at giving people access to sites like Wikipedia," a free, user-maintained online encyclopedia, and other information and news sources, Michael Hull, psiphon's lead engineer, told CBC News Online.[21]

[edit] Proxy servers

Often, internet censorship can be bypassed by using proxy servers. These are often available as websites which get the entered url, and show the website, but all the content is passed through these sites. See proxy servers.

[edit] Censorship by online communities

Forums and chatrooms frequently have moderators, who will edit or remove material against the rules of that community. The scope of these rules varies from community to community - some will want material to be suitable for a specific audience, whilst others only require discussions to be kept within the law. Many USENET groups are unmoderated.

[edit] Commonly censored websites

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i ONI: Internet Filtering Map (Flash). Open Net Initiative. Retrieved on 2006-08-31.
  2. ^ China. Reporters Without Borders. Retrieved on 2006-08-31.
  3. ^ Vietnam. Reporters Without Borders. Retrieved on 2006-08-31.
  4. ^ Iran. Reporters Without Borders. Retrieved on 2006-08-31.
  5. ^ Iran blocks access to video-sharing on YouTube. USA Today. Retrieved on 2006-12-12.
  6. ^ Uzbekistan. Reporters Without Borders. Retrieved on 2006-08-31.
  7. ^ Tunisia. Reporters Without Borders. Retrieved on 2006-08-31.
  8. ^ Syrian jailed for internet usage. BBC News (2004-06-21).
  9. ^ Maldives. Reporters Without Borders. Retrieved on 2006-08-31.
  10. ^ MALDIVES: Life imprisonment for publishing Internet article. Amnesty International. Retrieved on 2006-08-31.
  11. ^ Valdez, Nelson. "Cuba", Web censorship: Correspondent reports, Cuba in Transition, 1999-04-12. Retrieved on 2006-11-30.
  12. ^ Sprinkle, Timothy. "Press Freedom Group Tests Cuban Internet Surveillance", World Politics Watch, 2006-11-08. Retrieved on 2006-11-30.
  13. ^ North Korea. Reporters Without Borders. Retrieved on 2006-08-31.
  14. ^ Source: a country study by the OpenNet Initiative
  15. ^ http://www.educationupdate.com/archives/2003/oct03/issue/spot_internetcensor.html
  16. ^ "Blocking the Blogs", Outlook India, 2006-07-18. Retrieved on 2006-07-19.
  17. ^ Sengupta, Somini. "India Blocks Blogs in Wake of Mumbai Bombings", The New York Times, 2006-07-18. Retrieved on 2006-07-19.
  18. ^ "Bloggers are back in business", The Hindu, 2006-07-25. Retrieved on 2006-07-30.
  19. ^ (Danish) Krabbe, Klaus. "TDC aktiverer filter mod børneporno", Computerworld, 2005-10-18. Retrieved on 2006-07-19.
  20. ^ (Danish) Madsen, Kristoffer. "Politisk strid om politiets børneporno-filter", Computerworld, 2006-03-20. Retrieved on 2006-07-19.
  21. ^ Tool to circumvent internet censorship set to launch

[edit] External links

News reports

Campaigns against

Circumvention resources


Free web based anonymizing proxies at the Open Directory Project