Mar 31 2009

Internet Censorship in Western Countries

For years now, Western countries have been condemning China and many other countries for censorship. And with good reason. Without access to information, the general public has no mechanism to oversee what their leadership is up to.

Now, however, many Western countries—with Germany and Australia in the lead—are quietly implementing censorship measures. This is an outrage and is unlikely to even address the alleged issue of curbing illegal activities such as child pornography. Let me explain.

What Went Wrong

The censorship is being implemented by means of blacklisted websites, i.e. a list of websites deemed illegal. Using the anecdotal sample of the leaked Australian blacklist, we find sites such as:

  • Religious groups
  • Political contrarians
  • Pro-abortion sites
  • A dentist
  • The blacklist itself

It’s quite possibly that some of the sites have ended up on the list by accident, but it’s hard to conceive of a scenario where the sites presenting dissident opinions have been “accidentally” censored. In any case we’ve ended up with a policy of censorship with no transparency and a seemingly arbitrary process of selection.

I worry about my child and the Internet all the time, even though she’s too young to have logged on yet. Here’s what I worry about. I worry that 10 or 15 years from now, she will come to me and say “Daddy, where were you when they took freedom of the press away from the Internet?”

Mike Godwin, Electronic Frontier Foundation

Why It Wouldn’t Work Anyway

Okay, fine, so we give up a little bit of freedom in exchange for stopping the real criminals. That must be worth something, right? Actually, no.

The “real criminal” would simply contact a server in, say, Russia over a secured line, bypass your blacklist, and continue his work unimpeded. Or use Freenets. Or use any of the millions of computers taken over by trojan horses, maybe even yours. Or a VPN or a VNC. Well, you get the idea. Even the creepy, low-tech uncle from next door could easily use any of the freely available proxy servers on the web.

For anyone committed to doing so, circumventing the censorship is trivial. The only thing these censorship measures accomplish is to limit the freedom of the average, honest citizen.

What Should We Do Instead

At a bare minimum the criteria for the censorship must be made public and the process of blacklisting transparent. But that’s just adding polish to a rotting system. The real solution lies in international cooperation to cut to the core of the issue by rounding up the organized crime organizations and individuals committing atrocities.

Will you quietly accept these steps to an Orwellian future or will you speak up and ask our leaders to walk the talk? This is not a conspiracy theory. I wish it were. This is happening in our own backyards by our own politicians. Speak truth to power.


Feb 14 2009

My Blog Setup

A couple of people have already asked me about how I set up my blog. I won’t go into details here but rather focus on some of the more exotic parts of the setup, such as the multi-channel publishing.

Hosting and Domain Name

I was lucky enough to land on the DreamHost signup page just in time to get their Obama Inauguration offer. They’re a good deal even without the offer, though. Not necessarily red carpet treatment but cheap and good enough. Hey, they’re even green! Use promo code “jointhetribe” for a $97 discount ($51 discount for the monthly payment offer).

“Dot what? Name? Where can I get one?” I bought my domain name from 1&1 since DreamHost’s free domain names didn’t cover .name domains.

The Blog

Thanks to DreamHost’s simple one-click installs, I was up and running with a WordPress blog in less than 5 minutes after signing up. After that I installed some essential plugins, hooked up FeedBurner for subscriber tracking and email subscriptions, and I was ready to go live.

Comments

I replaced the standard comment system with Disqus, because I liked the idea of enriching the comment experience a bit (threading, voting, etc.) and tying it to a larger discussion ecosystem.

Multi-Channel Conversations

The “My Recent Activity” widget in the sidebar is pulled from FriendFeed, which aggregates all my online activity from YouTube videos and GoodReads book reviews to Twitter updates and Delicious bookmarks. Much of this also gets posted onto FaceBook and, for example, my Disqus profile.

Why go through all this trouble, you might ask? Admittedly part of it is just to satisfy the techie propeller head in me, but the main reason is the ease with which I find myself drawn into interesting conversations this way. One click on “Favourite” in YouTube and suddenly my email box springs alive with comments from blog readers and my FaceBook wall becomes a coffee table conversation.

This was inspiration enough for me to really dive into blogging. I sincerely hope that you also decide to join the tribes.