• On GameSpot: Wii Fit tells 10-year-old she's fat

February 2, 2007 4:00 AM PST

Perspective: Dictatorships catching up with Web 2.0

See all Perspectives
  • Print
A decade ago, regime opponents in Vietnam or Tunisia were still printing leaflets in their basements and handing them out to fellow militants at clandestine meetings. Independent newspapers were no more than a few hastily stapled photocopies distributed secretly.

These days, "subversive" or "counter-revolutionary" material goes on the Internet and political dissidents and journalists have become "cyberdissidents" and "online journalists." Most of them know how to create a blog, organize a chat group, make phone calls through a computer and use a proxy to get around censorship.

New technology allows them to receive and share news out of sight of the authorities. The Web is also a blessing for human rights groups, which can now build a file on a political prisoner with a few mouse clicks instead of taking weeks and sometimes months. The Web makes networking much easier, for political activists as well as teenagers. Unfortunately, this progress and use of new tools by activists is now being matched by the efforts of dictatorships to fight them. Dictators, too, have entered the world of Web 2.0.

Sixty people are currently in jail for posting criticism of governments online, with China's 50 making it by far the world's worst prison for cyberdissidents. The Chinese have been aped by other countries--four such dissidents are in jail in Vietnam, three in Syria and one each in Tunisia, Libya and Iran.

Sixty people are currently in jail for posting criticism of governments online.

Parliaments in these countries, along with the local cyberpolice, closely follow the latest technological developments. When instant messaging, such as MSN Messenger, became all the rage, China asked the firms that made these programs to automatically block some key words, making it impossible for Chinese users to talk about the Dalai Lama and Taiwanese independence, for example.

And with the success of YouTube, China and Iran are keen to filter the videos that appear there--too much "subversive" content for China and too much "immorality" for Iran. In Vietnam, police and dissidents play cat-and-mouse with "chat rooms;" three people were arrested there in October 2005 for discussing democracy on Paltalk, a U.S. Web site that organizes remote meetings. One of them, Truong Quoc Huy, was still in prison at the end of 2006.

Spyware filters
The Internet was not designed to protect message confidentiality. It is fast and fairly reliable, but also easy to spy on and censor. From the first mouse click, users leave a trail and reveal information about themselves and what their tastes and habits are. This data is very valuable to commercial firms, which sort through it to target their advertising better.

The police also use it. The best way to spy on journalists a few years ago was still to send a plain-clothes officer to stand outside their house. This can be done more cheaply and efficiently now because machines can spy, report back and automatically prevent subversive conversations.

Cuba has installed spyware in cybercafe computers so that when users type "banned" words in an e-mail, such as the name of a known political dissident, they see a warning that they are writing things considered a "threat to state security" and the Web navigator then immediately shuts down.

The predators of free expression are not all the same. China keeps a tight grip on what is written and downloaded by users, spends an enormous amount on Internet surveillance equipment, and hires armies of informants and cyberpolice. It also has the political weight to force the companies in the sector--such as Yahoo, Google, Microsoft and Cisco Systems--to do what it wants them to; all have agreed to censor their search engines to filter out Web sites overcritical of the authorities.

This makes the regime's job much easier because these firms are the main entry points to the Internet. If a Web site is not listed by these search engines, material posted on them has about as much chance of being found as a message in a bottle thrown into the sea.

Not all countries are strong enough to make the U.S. multinational Internet firms bend to their will, but all authoritarian regimes are now working to censor the Web, even countries in sub-Saharan Africa. The Ethiopian regime of Prime Minister Meles Zenawi has blocked openly critical Web sites and blogs since May 2006, and President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe is considering a law allowing security forces to intercept online messages without reference to the courts. One of the first moves by Thailand's military rulers after their September coup was to censor news Web sites, even foreign ones, that criticized the takeover.

When a dictator cannot effectively censor the Internet, he can take a more radical approach--barring Internet access to virtually everyone, as in North Korea and Turkmenistan. And when a tyrant dies, as Turkmenistan's "President-for-Life" Saparmurat Nyazov did in December, his successor starts work by declaring his policy toward the Internet. These days, dictators talk about the Web when they want to show their regime is progressive. Internet users are organizing themselves and conjuring up new solutions to tackle these dictatorships, get around the filters and protect their anonymity. They use and create new technology, encrypt their e-mail and use other tools that are still not detected by cyberpolice.

The Web phone service Skype, for example, has made it much easier for journalists--and Reporters Without Borders--to communicate with their sources. It works especially well because it is encrypted, so conversations are hard to tap. But China has already signed an agreement with Skype to block key words, so how can we be sure our conversations are not being listened to? How do we know if Skype will not also allow (or already has allowed) the Chinese police to spy on its customers?

It has become vital to examine new technology from a moral standpoint and understand the secondary effects. If firms and democratic countries continue to duck the issue and pass off ethical responsibility on others, we shall soon be in a world where all our communications are spied on.

Biography
Julien Pain is the head of the Internet freedom desk for Reporters Without Borders.

More Perspectives

See more CNET content tagged:
jail, Iran, Vietnam, Web 2.0, China

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 8 comments
And Your Point Is?
by Len Bullard February 2, 2007 8:19 AM PST
Sorry Julien, but the spying on communications has been a fact of the electronic age since the end of WWII. What the witless fielding of the World Wide Web did was to push this ability down from the central governments to the local governments and beyond to employers and even desperate housewives. What you are witnessing is the scaling effect down to the microlevels as the commercial interests of the software and hardware vendors drive the technology from the top to the second and third tiers of their marketplaces.

Tell you what: challenge the self-selected leaders of the web revolution to speak out on this topic and let's hear what they have to say. Take your cause not to the Microsofts and Googles of the world who will only turn you back with pre-written corporate replies, take it to the self-selected thought leaders such as Tim Berners-Lee, Jon Bosak, Tim Bray, James Gosling, Dan Connoly, and Adam Bosworth.

Those who bent the twig should now answer for the shape of the tree. They wanted to lead when the problems were easy and the solutions were many. Let's hear their thoughts now that the problem is hard and the solutions are few.
Reply to this comment
Stallman too
by Too Old For IT February 2, 2007 8:48 AM PST
I'd be interested in the RMS take on dictatiorships censoring the internet.

Yet another who still demands to lead.
The solution is clear.
by chash360 February 2, 2007 4:49 PM PST
Communication should be free, period, end of story. There should be no crime associated with electronic comunication alone, there needs to be a real crime with real evidence before any legal action is taken. Digital evidence can be manufactured flawlessly, so there should be no thing as a purely electronic crime. The solution is this: a completely anonymous access system, a recordless dynamic network addressing scheme, with absolutely no plain text transmission, all cyphered on a session by session basis using encryption keys produced at random, on demand that are absolutely unpredictable (and their true form must not be possible for a human to comprehend or obtain). You will have such security when you can publish every detail of the inner workings of the system and still be ensured that it can not be hacked. Nothing can prevent access using stolen ID's and passwords, but if your traffic is encrypted, your ID and location completely anonymous, they will have to physically spy on you the old fashon way. Much of this is how the Internet used to be, but M$ changed all that, when execution code started being attahced to traffic and automatically run by clients (RPC, etc.). Then they started to track everything you do online in the OS directly. There is an answer, its coming soon......but it will not be on the Internet we know today.
Blacklisting "Communist Party"
by hackingbear February 2, 2007 11:00 AM PST
This is an issue for any website operator in China. When I was in China working on a website which has a forum/blog feature, we have to put in filter to block the sensitive words. As a silent protest, in addition to the usual forbidden words like "Dalai Lama", "Taiwan", "Tiananmen" etc, I decided to enlarge my list to include words that are normally allowed:

- Communist Party
- Hu Jintao (the name of the president of China)
- Jiang Zemin (the former president)
- Li Peng (the former infamous Premier)

Hack, if we can't talk about Tiananmen, maybe we should not talk about the Party, good or bad, either. Any mentioning of these will not be posted.

I almost want to put "China" into the list but its usages may be too wide.
Reply to this comment
Internet (lack of) privacy
by petexeno February 6, 2007 12:19 AM PST
Good article!
Reply to this comment
Internet (lack of) privacy
by petexeno February 6, 2007 12:19 AM PST
Good article!
Reply to this comment
Diplomatic policy
by burbalurba February 6, 2007 8:53 AM PST
I've wondered, why wouldn't the US work to deliver uncensored wireless broadband to dictatorships to undermine their rule, in conjunction with/in place of traditional diplomatic countermeasures?
You'd think that blocking such wireless signals (broadcast from multiple satellites)would be too difficult for a country such as North Korea to swing...
Reply to this comment
Abuse of Privileges
by index2006 February 9, 2007 1:31 PM PST
--Many years ago circa 1998 I wrote a candid critic to the webmaster(now semi-demised varig) about their awfull home page. On the very same day late evening my phone rings and guess who? It was varig's webmaster in person!! I asked him how he learned about my telephone number and he answered proudly that he had contacted my isp and that's it. He also was offensive and intimidating. I was appalled and shocked. I called my isp for explanations and they told me it was ok that practice. Since then i realised that words like privacy and identity meant absolutely the opposite in the internet. Today(ten years after) whenever i post a comment or simply surf the net i bear in mind that i'm doing it in public all out...as if i was in a stadium.
The lesson: Don't do anything i wouldn't do myself!!
Reply to this comment
advertisement

Latest tech news headlines

RSS Feeds

Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.

More feeds available in our RSS feed index.

Markets

Market news, charts, SEC filings, and more

Related quotes

Dow Jones Industrials (6.54%) 494.13 8,046.42
S&P 500 (6.32%) 47.59 800.03
NASDAQ (5.18%) 68.23 1,384.35
CNET TECH (5.95%) 56.25 1,002.00
  Symbol Lookup
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right