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Myanmar Has The Greatest Repression Of Bloggers

Myanmar Has The Greatest Repression Of Bloggers

Myanmar – the country formerly known as Burma – has been judged the most restrictive country for bloggers, according to a new report from the Committee to Protect Journalists.

The junta ruling Myanmar blocked all Internet access for a while during uprisings in 2007.

Coming second on the list is Iran, where blogger Omid Mir Sayafi died in Tehran’s Evin jail. He’d allegedly insulted the country’s leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in his blog.

Among the other countries named and shamed in the report are Syria, Cuba, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, China, Turkmenistan, and Egypt, where over 100 bloggers were arrested last year.

PayPal Expands Global Service

PayPal Expands Global Service

Folks who thought eBay’s online payment service PayPal was already pretty ubiquitous might be in for a little shock: the service is expanding its global reach by rolling out fully localized sites in Mexico, Singapore, and Hong Kong, as well as adding nine new languages to its primary Web site, including Danish, NOrwegian, Portuguese, Russian, Swedish, Thai, Traditional Chinese, Turkish, and Bahasa Indonesian.

The additions bring the number of localized PayPal sites to 18, and make PayPal accessible to about 120 million more potential users. Users will be able to send and receive payments using their local currencies, as well as conduct transactions with PayPal’s existing 65 million account holders.

Stolen Laptops Come Home

Imagine if there was a tracker buried deep in your laptop, put there in the motherboard bio during manufacture so it can’t be wiped. CompuTrace One, a tracking solution from Absolute Software, is that, and has helped track 5,000 computers.   Certainly it’s worked for the West Midlands Police in Britain, who used it to trace 30 stolen computers from as far away as Saudi Arabia and Argentina. When one of the stolen machines was hooked up to the Net, it automatically connected to a monitoring center to give its IP address. That let local police use the ISP to discover its location.   Alan McInnes, general manager with the Association of Chief Police Officers crime prevention initiatives, told silicon.com,   "The more widely this technology is used, the more the risk goes up and the more it will devalue the attractiveness of computer theft. This tracking technology has already proven itself useful for recovering large numbers of cars, its success rate is about 95 percent, and we hope it will do the same for computers. You not only recover the stolen property you are looking for, you often will uncover more stolen property and other related crimes."

Cyber Demos Protest Online Censorship

Cyber Demos Protest Online CensorshipChina, North Korea, Burma…they’re places where protest has been crushed. But yesterday people demonstrated against Net censorship in virtual locations from those countries.  Organized by the group Reporters Without Borders, the first Online Free Expression Day invited people to create avatars and take part in demonstrations in virtuallocations where protest would not be allowed in the real world.   In a statement RWB said, “From now on, we will organize activities every 12 March to condemn cyber-censorship throughoutthe world. A response of this kind is needed to the growing tendency to crack down on bloggers and to close websites." “Today, the first time this day is being marked, we are giving allInternet users the opportunity to demonstrate in places were protests are not normally possible. We hope many will come and protest in virtual versions of Beijing’s Tiananmen Square,Cuba’s Revolution Square or on the streets of Rangoon, in Burma. At least 62 cyber-dissidents are currently imprisoned worldwide, while more than 2,600 websites, blogs or discussions forumswere closed or made inaccessible in 2007.” UNESCO had originally supported the demonstration, but later withdrew its support.   RWB lists 15 countriesas Internet Enemies (Belarus, Burma, China, Cuba, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Tunisia, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Vietnam and Zimbabwe) which censor Net use and imprisondissenting voices. Another 11 – Bahrain, Eritrea, Gambia, Jordan, Libya, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, Tajikistan, Thailand, United Arab Emirates and Yemen – are classed as “countries underwatch.”

Bible On Yr Moby

Bible On Yr MobyIf you’re someone who likes to carry the Bible with you, it just became a whole lot easier.   ChristianMobile, a South African-basedcompany, is offering downloads of the Old and New Testaments for $12 each in the UK. The company will also offer daily inspirational messages by text.   The company already operates in severalcountries, including the US, offering the same services. It claims to have distributed 80,000 virtual Bibles in the South Africa alone (the Bibles are in proper English, not text speak, in case youwondered).   According to their site, ChristinaMobile exists so “to enable every mobile phone user to hear the Gospel of Jesus Christ so that each phone user may believe in Him, call uponHis name and be saved by Him. That they may be equipped with wisdom and revelation for faith and action through His leading by the power of the Holy Spirit into the ministry of reconciliation of manwith God.”   Of course, this isn’t really anything new to the US, where Christian content online and on mobiles has been quickly adopted. But it brings something different to the UK,which has never been a hotbed of religion.   However, according to a report in The Guardian, ChristianMobile will have its work cut out in the future, asit plans to expand its efforts to Bahrain, China, Egypt, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Yemen and Iraq.  

Apple iPhone Sales Top 1 Million

Apple iPhone Sales Top 1 Million

Apple introduced the iPhone on June 29; now, 74 days later, the company says it has sold one million iPhones. Initially debuting at $499 for a 4 GB edition and $599 for an 8 GB version, Apple recently dropped the 4 GB edition and slashed the price of the 8 GB iPhone to $399. Responding to early-adopters ire, Apple also says it will offer early iPhone buyers a $100 credit to ease the pain of the price cut; details are due this week.

Google Seeks Government Censorship Help

Google Seeks Government Censorship HelpGoogle is taking an unusual tack on Internet censorship. The search engine giant has decided that censorship is a trade barrier, and wants the U.S. government todo something about it as an economic, rather than political, issue.   According to the company, one of their representatives had met several times with members of the U.S. Trade Representative’s office to address the issue.   Given Google’s business model, which is driven by ads, their take on censorship becomes moreunderstandable. If a Google page isn’t displayed, there are no ads, and no income.   But it seems as if the government isn’t convinced that censorship has created trade barriers. Aspokesperson from the USTR said that censorship is treaded as a human rights issue, and comes under the State Department.   Of course, Google itself has come under fire for agreeing to censorits Chinese site, although the company has stated that this was the only way the Chinese government would allow users to access Google pages.   On the whole, however, human rights advocates havebeen pleased with Google’s performance. But at the company’s annual meeting, in response to a shareholder resolution that the company renounce all censorship, the board recommended a voteagainst the move.   There’s been a rise in countries adopting Internet censorship. Apart from China, Saudi Arabia, India, Singapore and Thailand are among the countries that either filteror entirely block web pages, in some cases the Google-owned YouTube.   For now, Google will continue to try and persuade the government that censorship canbe an economic issue.   “It’s fair to say that censorship is the No. 1 barrier to trade that we face,” said Google’s director of public policy and government affairs AndrewMcLaughlin.

Amnesty Criticizes Online Repression

Amnesty Criticizes Online RepressionAs Amnesty International celebrates the first birthday of its web site irrepressible.info, it’s issued a direwarning about the erosion of online freedom.   Coming just before a conference organized by Amnesty, “Some People Think theInternet is a Bad Thing: The Struggle for Freedom of Expression in Cyberspace,” the organization hasn’t been shy in pointing fingers at the big three of Microsoft, Google and Yahoofor being complicit in the repression.   “The Chinese model of an internet that allow economic growth but not free speech or privacy is growing in popularity, from a handful of countriesfive years ago to dozens of governments today who block sites and arrest bloggers. Unless we act on this issue, the internet could change beyond all recognition in the years to come,” explainedAmnesty campaign director Tim Hancock.   Among the techniques used by governments is filtering online content, and a recent report reveals that this happens in at least 25 countries, includingSaudi Arabia and India. Other repressive measures used by some governments include closing Internet cafes and web sites, as well as imprisonment and threats.   Globally, there have been severalexamples of bloggers imprisoned for comments. In Egypt, Abdul Kareem Nabeel received four years in prison for defaming the country’s president and insulting Islam. More are in jail in China.  Amnesty is relaunching irrepressible.ino to coincide with the conference and hopes to make the site a center for all those interested in online freedom.

Amnesty Uses Satellites to Monitor Darfur

At this point, most technologically-savvy individuals are used to the idea of satellites in orbit around the earth, enabling everything from international phone calls and Internet connectivity to GPS systems and the hundreds of channels of television we seem to think are part of our everyday live. Now, in a first for a human rights organization, Amnesty International is using satellite imagery technology for a purely humanitarian purpose: monitoring vulnerable villages in Sudan’s war-torn Darfur region. And you can help.

Net Censorship Increasing Worldwide

A year-long study by the OpenNet Initiative, detailed at a conference in Oxford, England, examined the practices of 41 countries to learn about online government surveillance and censorship. The results? Where five years ago only a handful of states were filtering Internet content, the study found 25 of the countries it examined were engaged in state-mandated filtering and censorship of online content, and the filtering is becoming more sophisticated over time, entailing not only outright blocks on particular Web sites or topics, but bans on applications like Skype and Google Maps.

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