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In Most Censored Countries, Internet Is Hamstrung or Withheld

Posted: 05/ 1/2012 9:10 pm

By Danny O'Brien/CPJ Internet Advocacy Coordinator

One big reason for the Internet's success is its role as a universal standard, interoperable across the world. The data packets that leave your computer in Botswana are the same as those which arrive in Barbados. The same is increasingly true of modern mobile networks. Standards are converging: You can use your phone, access an app, or send a text, wherever you are.

But in CPJ's new report, The 10 Most Censored Nations, communications networks are constructed not to live up to that ideal, but to fit the limitations of press freedom in each country. The Internet and mobile phones may be transforming how the news is covered, but CPJ's list shows the extent to which controls on news-gatherers distort and hamper the growth of the Internet and cellphone use.

The pattern is different in each country, reflecting local priorities in silencing the independent press. In Belarus and Syria, the Net is home to unlawful but state-sanctioned hacking and surveillance. In Saudi Arabia, Internet users are subject to the same harsh controls that are applied to traditional news media. In Uzbekistan, Internet access is growing, but censorship is still draconian. In Equatorial Guinea, Internet and mobile censorship is minimal, but so is the infrastructure.

In fact, the simplest solution many of these countries have found -- including North Korea, Burma, Cuba, and Eritrea -- is to simply deny their people access to any modern communications infrastructure at all. The Internet in these nations is nonexistent, or profoundly limited: in some cases because of these countries' struggle with poverty, but also because these governments are suspicious of the dangers of a free and open Net.

What Internet infrastructure does exist often mirrors political realities on the ground. In Burma, the countries' Internet is effectively divided into three, self-contained systems: one for the people, one for the government, and one for the military. North Korea's citizens (unlike the ruling elite) have as much access to the World Wide Web as they have to any independent media -- which is to say none. And while Cuba has seen some improvement in availability and affordability of mobile telephones, the country is still struggling to catch up after a history of banning private cellphone and computer ownership.

Eritrea stands as a stark example of how a government's uncompromising approach to media has obstructed the spread of modern communications. In a continent where mobile telephony has transformed local reporting and economies, the regime has been slow to allow mobile phones -- (permission was granted only in 2004). The Internet was made available in Eritrea in 2000; the Net on mobiles is still largely unavailable. All mobile communications pass through EriTel, the state provider, and the government requires all ISPs to use the government-controlled Internet gateway.

When a country with advanced systems clamps down on press freedom, that too affects the state of its communication networks. In the six years since CPJ last published a list of most censored countries, Iran's media, and foreign correspondents based there, have suffered increasing setbacks as hardliners tried to choke off local reporting. At the same time, Iran has been investing in technology and personnel with the explicit intent of restricting Internet access. Officials have repeatedly discussed plans to create a national, or "pure," Iranian Internet, and Iranians face frequent slowdowns in Internet access. A member of the Iranian parliament's Net filtering committee described the Internet as "an uninvited guest" in the country, saying that "because of its numerous problems, severe supervision is required."

The working Internet is alike, the world over. Every censored, silenced, and filtered national network is broken in its own way. Each country on our list has found a unique way to hamper the spread of journalism online: the end result has been to punish its own citizens with online isolation and silence.

San Francisco-based CPJ Internet Advocacy Coordinator Danny O'Brien has worked globally as a journalist and activist covering technology and digital rights.

Follow CPJ on Twitter: @pressfreedom

Follow CPJ on Facebook: @committeetoprotectjournalists

 
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newshound620
Still here
04:22 PM on 06/28/2012
The countries mentioned in this article live in fear that someone will discover they are stupid, medieval governments bent on the destruction of humanity.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nelson rivera
Disabled US Veteran hopes we can work together
11:58 PM on 05/21/2012
Some of the Largest and Fastest Server Farms on in USA to Monitor Internet and Cellphones. They call it the War against Terrorism.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Val Mercy
In war, truth is the first casualty.
06:08 PM on 05/27/2012
I've heard of that war. Is that the fake one that props up a welfare war industry at the expense of our safety?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
eileenflemingWAWA
http://www.wearewideawake.org/
07:46 AM on 05/21/2012
Just weeks after Mordechai Vanunu's freedom of speech trial began after Israel brought charges against him for speaking to foreign media in 2004 after emerging from 18 years in jail for telling the truth and providing the photographic proof of Israel's WMD program [in 1986!] Vanunu told me:

“Many journalists come here to the American Colony, from CNN and NY Times. They all want to cover my story, but their EDITORS say no...CNN wants to interview me; but they say they can't do it because they don't want problems with the Israeli censor. BBC is doing the same thing.

"Sixty Minutes from the United States from the beginning they wanted to do a program, but because of the censor situation they decide not to do it. Also big media from Germany, France, Italy, Japan. None of them wants problems with the Israelis."

Hear and See Vanunu tell more about Israeli censorship in "30 MINUTES WITH VANUNU" @
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kwdz6dLbfok
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
eileenflemingWAWA
http://www.wearewideawake.org/
07:53 AM on 05/21/2012
More Info and how to HELP FREE VANUNU @
http://www.causes.com/causes/523841-free-mordechai-vanunu
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
eileenflemingWAWA
http://www.wearewideawake.org/
07:38 AM on 05/21/2012
On 1 May 2012, Israel's Nuclear Whistle Blower, Mordechai Vanunu wrote me just hours before he deactivated his Facebook Wall and TWITTER Account, "Hi. Today they sent first notice, they will renew the restrictions.sent to my Lawyer. Now you are free,we can close the Cause.either you do it or I will do it."

The Cause refers to Free Mordechai Vanunu, currently with over 5,700 Members and this Journalist, Author and candidate for US HOUSE remains the only Administrator:
http://www.causes.com/causes/523841-free-mordechai-vanunu
01:26 AM on 05/04/2012
During the G.W. Bush administration, they introduced a bill that would give Corporate America privileged access and increased speed to all internet servers.

The common folk would just have to wait their turn.
01:23 AM on 05/04/2012
Most censored countries includes the good ole' USA.
01:20 AM on 05/04/2012
Internet access and speed IS hamstrung or withheld in the USA.

We are not even in the top 10 in internet speed.

South Korea is #1.
12:08 PM on 05/03/2012
You can always tell a liberal multi-culti site by all those trying laughable analogies between North Korea and U.S. internet access.
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Shadow Diver
When The Going Gets Weird, The Weird Turn Pro
10:13 AM on 05/03/2012
Nobody should kid themselves. If OWS showed us anything, it showed us that our own government will resort to Syrian tactics (turning off the internet and cell phones) the minute they feel threatened.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
realitytrumpsbull
Two 'alves of coconut!
06:25 AM on 05/03/2012
One great thing that The Government can do when people start politically organizing online and causing problems and raising hell and stuff, is to start shutting off all the electrically powered computer equipment, and seizing mobile technology, and the person/people holding the technology. There's agitators online, who buys their donuts? That's debatable, but it bears remembering that we've got a lot of political 'stuff' at our own American college campuses, and curiously...they have this internet-stuff...too....hmmm....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gypsysailor
Things that might have been never were.
12:39 AM on 05/03/2012
What, the US is not in the top ten? Who are the people that drew these conclusions? Have they never liver here in this country. Last year there was an Arab spring. They got quite a bit of attention. While here in our own country when the OWLS protested there was an initial news blanket of 2 weeks surrounding the protest. Same for Wisconsin. Who owns the news? The damn conservatives, that's who.
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Limpbaugh
THANK YOU FOX NEWS FOR KEEPING US INFROMED
04:56 AM on 05/03/2012
Our ranking was censored.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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10:51 AM on 05/03/2012
LOL ! Sorry my friend but were you just joking around or really trying to say we are the worst? Ows got way to much coverage last year for really how many were involved. As for Wisconsin once people figured out it was the unions paying people to be at the state house it wasn`t exactly news anymore.
10:59 PM on 05/02/2012
US is actually most censored country in the world. All its medias are controlled by a SELECTED few rich people.

What you read, heard and watched in US media are mostly well planned and controlled.

Controlled facts or filtered facts are nothing but lies.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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weebles48
i don't need no stinkin badges.
10:42 AM on 05/03/2012
the corporate media.
ge is a weapons manufacturer and huge news and internet outlet: msnbc, nbc and they build weapons of war.
it's no mystery that the media cheered on war on the runup to the iraq invasion.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
07:43 PM on 05/02/2012
North Korea sounds like a one percenter's paradise.
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Anybodyseenthepopos
אני כלום בלעדיהם
05:50 PM on 05/02/2012
The List:
Eritrea

North Korea

Syria

Iran

Equatorial Guinea

Uzbekistan

Burma
Saudi Arabia

Cuba

Belarus

DOES NOT SURPRISE.
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AmericaninIndia
American Capitalist Pursuing the Dream in India.
01:33 PM on 05/02/2012
For free Internet, come to India. Nobody gives a darn what you do on the Web here. It's a truly free, democratic country. No surveillance cameras, either. I feel like I'm back in the States when I was a kid before 9/11.
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6531WilliamsG
Prior service Marine,Uni grad, U.S. Army shortly
11:41 PM on 06/17/2012
Oh, neat. I didn't like India back in the day for the slow internet in the cafes is it better these days?