censorship

Well, this is interesting, both on the Bo Xilai story and also on the general theme of the state of the art in contemporary authoritarianism. It looks like a major part of the case is about BXL’s electronic surveillance of Chongqing and specifically of top national-level Chinese officials: One political analyst with senior-level ties, citing…

Read More Canalising the marshes: tidying up the people

Does anyone have any idea why I’m banned from reading ForeignPolicy.com? For the last few days, the three FP blogs I subscribe to haven’t been updating, and trying to read this I had to use an anonymous SSL-proxy server. Just for that “test your practical circumvention skills” feeling! I can ping and traceroute to their…

Read More RST

If I hadn’t been fiddling with file permissions to get WordPress running last Sunday, I’d probably have been writing about the Haystack saga. I’m a bit gestört by some of the coverage of it – Evgeny Morozov, typically, has been doing good work in the general war on bullshit, but I’m less convinced of his…

Read More “Cyberwar” and Iran: the other side of the hill

Bob Dylan lyric too appropriate not to use yet again. Who is trying to frighten MySociety.org users? It begins with a Daily Telegraph story that a clerk, Lisa Greenwood, in the Department for Children, Schools and Families was sacked for posting a comment about Hazel Blears on theyworkforyou. Unfortunately, no comment including the text quoted…

Read More someone’s got it in for us, they’re planting stories in the press

Arbor Networks has a great post with data on Iranian Internet censorship. As well as the deliberate transit shortage, they seem to be targeting specific protocols, notably SSH, the secure shell protocol one uses to administer servers and also quite often to provide a VPN tunnel. This isn’t surprising, really, but it is depressing; practically…

Read More spam

More China convergence blogging. Declan McCullagh reports on efforts by the US and China to sneak something nasty into the ITU standardisation process, through a committee that doesn’t publish its documentation or let anyone else in the room. But the Chinese appear to be the ones leaning forward; The Chinese author of the document, Huirong…

Read More They have wakened the timeless Things; they have killed their father Time

One of the many wonderful things about the Web is that its hypertext structure not only permits us to navigate it, and to invoke external resources (scripts, graphics, etc), but also to measure relevance and authority. Google’s killer insight was of course just this; to use links as votes for the relevance of a given…

Read More Anti-Link