Archive for April, 2017

Russia Is Copying China’s Approach to Internet Censorship Will It Work? – Pacific Standard

Just a few years ago, Russians had a mostly free Internet, but now, authorities are trying to imitate Chinas model of government control.

By Emily Parker

When you hear the words Russia and Internet, you probably think of Kremlin-backed hacking. But the Internet is also a powerful tool for President Vladimir Putins opposition. Last month, the Internet helped spark Russias largest anti-government protests in five years. Russia responded by blocking access to websites that promoted demonstrations.

This is part of a larger story. Just a few years ago, Russians had a mostly free Internet. Now, Russian authorities would like to imitate Chinas model of Internet control. They are unlikely to succeed. The Kremlin will find that, once you give people Internet freedom, its not so easy to completely take it away.

I lived in Moscow in 2010 after spending years researching Internet activism in China. I quickly found that Russia and China had very different attitudes toward the Web. The Great Firewall of China blocked overseas sites such as Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube. In Russia, by contrast, you could find almost any information online. This was largely because Russian authorities didnt view the Internet as a serious political threat. That changed in late 2011 and early 2012, when Moscow was the site of the largest anti-government protests since the end of the Soviet Union. Social media helped organize those demonstrations, and Putin took note. A law that took effect in late 2012, to give just one example, granted Russian authorities the power to block certain online content.

Moscow clearly admires Beijings approach. Last year, former Chinese Internet czar Lu Wei and Great Firewall architect Fang Binxing were invited to speak at a forum on Internet safety. The Russians were apparently hoping to learn Chinese techniques for controlling the Web. Russia has already taken a page or two from Chinas playbook. While Facebook and Twitter remain accessible in Russia, at least for now, a Russian court ruled to ban LinkedIn, apparently for breaking rules that require companies to store personal data about Russian citizens inside the country. This could be a warning to companies like Google, Twitter, and Facebook, which risk being blocked in Russia if they refuse to follow such rules.

Both Russia and China have made clear that they wish to regulate the Internet as they see fit, without outside interference. Chinese President Xi Jinping has stressed the importance of Internet sovereignty, which essentially means that individual countries should have the right to choose their own model of cyber governance. Putin has taken this idea one step further by calling the Internet a CIA project. By this logic, Russia needs to proactively protect its own interests in the information sphere whether by cracking down on online dissent or using the Internet to spread its own version of events.

Russia Internet expert Andrei Soldatov, author of the book The Red Web, says the Kremlin certainly looks for something close to the China approach these days, mostly because many other things failedfiltering is porous, global platforms defy local legislation, and are still available. Soldatov says that the government would like to have direct control of critical infrastructure such as the national system of domain distribution, Internet exchange points, and cables that cross borders. He adds that this approach, which may not even be successful, would be more of an emergency measure than a realistic attempt to regulate the Internet on a day-to-day basis.

Chinas method has worked because Beijing has long recognized the Internet as both an economic opportunity and a political threat. Chinas isolated Internet culture has given rise to formidable domestic companies. It was once easy to dismiss Chinas local technology players as mere copycatsSina Weibo imitating Twitter, Baidu imitating Google, and so on. But now, some of these companies, notably Tencents WeChat, have become so formidable that we may soon see Western companies imitating them. In the meantime, Chinese Internet users arent necessarily longing for their Western competitors.

In Russia, however, American sites like YouTube have become very powerful. The recent demonstrations were in part sparked by an online report by opposition leader and anti-corruption blogger Alexey Navalny, who alleged that Russian President Dmitri Medvedev had amassed a fortune in yachts, mansions, and estates. Navalnys video on YouTube, viewed more than 16 million times, detailed this alleged corruption. Navalny called for protests after his demands for investigating official corruption was denied by the Russian parliament. According to Global Voices, the Russian prosecutors office recently requested the blocking of a YouTube video calling on young people to rally.

Russian blogger Elia Kabanov believes that YouTube is now too big to block. I doubt the Kremlin will go there, he said. They blocked LinkedIn mostly because it was a niche site in Russia and nobody cared. And of course the government propaganda machine is using YouTube a lot, so it wouldnt make any sense to block it. If they try to take down protest announcements on platforms on YouTube, Kabanov says, new ones will appear. I really cant see the way for the Kremlin to implement the Chinese model now: Everything is too connected, their own agencies are using all these services.

Russia does have its own domestic social networks, of course. VKontakte (VK), for example, is far more influential than Facebook. Soldatov notes that VK played an unusually big role in the recent protests. But Facebook still has a devoted Russian following, especially among political activists.

According to Soldatov:

No government can entirely control the flow of information. Even in China, those determined to find information can find a tool, say a virtual private network, to jump over the firewall. Russian censors will face a similar challenge. In recent years, there has been an ongoing increase in Russian use of Tor, a browser that can be used to circumvent censorship. As a 2015 Global Voices article noted, the increase in censorship closely mirrors the upward trend in interest towards Tor.

In the short term Russian street protests may fizzle out, especially as Moscow cracks down on dissent. But the story wont end there. The Internet on its own will not cause a revolution in Russia, but it can be an effective tool for organization. Beijing figured this out a long time ago, but the Kremlin is learning it too late.

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Russia Is Copying China's Approach to Internet Censorship Will It Work? - Pacific Standard

Censorship Watchdog: Bill Cosby’s Books for Kids Are Vanishing From Schools – Heat Street

A censorship watchdog has warned that novels by shamed comedian Bill Cosby are vanishing from school libraries.

Educators are perhaps unsurprisingly uncomfortable with the idea of their pupils reading titles from Cosbys Little Bill series after numerous rape allegations him.

The American Library Association named the books among its annual list of titles at risk of being censored, placing it 9th in the top 10.

Bills adventures have been much-loved reading tools for years, and were also the basis for an Emmy-winning Nickelodeon cartoon series.

However, the titles have clearly taken on the taint of scandal since scores of women began making allegations of sexual assault against Cosby.

The comedian is due to stand trial later this year in Pennsylvania on claims that he drugged and molested a student at Temple University in 2004.

Claims by many other women stretch back beyond the statute of limitations, so are unlikely ever to be contested in court, but have been aired extensively in the media.

Officials at the ALA said the turn against the titles was remarkable because it was not based on what is in the books, but the person who wrote them.

James LaRue, who leads the ALA Office for Intellectual Freedom, told CNN: I think its our fascination with celebrity. If we love the person we love everything about him.

If we hate the person we hate everything about him. We dont seem to be able to separate the message from the messenger.

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Censorship Watchdog: Bill Cosby's Books for Kids Are Vanishing From Schools - Heat Street

Senate hearing spotlights ‘political censorship’ of science – E&E News

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Hannah Hess, E&E News reporter

Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.) called for a fight against political censorship of climate scientists and their data today during a field hearing in West Palm Beach, Fla., on extreme weather and coastal flooding.

"If a doctor were barred from using the word 'cancer,' he or she can't do his job, and the same is true with scientists and the work they do to understand and educate the public about the Earth's own fever," said Nelson, ranking member of the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee.

Nelson hosted a panel of experts and local officials at a site less than 5 miles from Mar-a-Lago, the 124-room mansion that's been dubbed President Trump's "Winter White House," to talk about future risks and efforts to address the impacts of climate change which Trump has called a "hoax."

Like Trump, Florida Gov. Rick Scott (R) has drawn repeated criticism from environmental groups for sidestepping questions about climate change and saying he does not believe climate change is caused by humans.

Scott, who served as chairman of a super political action committee supporting Trump during the campaign, also came under fire for reports that Florida environmental regulators had been ordered not to use the phrases "climate change" and "global warming," even as the phenomena continue to affect the state (Greenwire, March 9, 2015).

Nelson invited Ben Kirtman, a professor with the University of Miami's Department of Atmospheric Sciences, who has spoken to Scott about climate science and has offered to educate Trump on the issue (E&E News PM, Dec. 22, 2016).

"Today we sit at ground zero of the impacts of climate change in the U.S. And while there are still some who continue to deny climate change is real, South Florida offers proof that it is real and it's an issue we're going to be grappling with for decades to come," Nelson said.

Kirtman summarized evidence that sea-level rise along the Eastern Seaboard of the United States is accelerating because of a number of factors that could be due to changes in ocean circulation associated with global warming.

"Even if one is skeptical that human activities are the cause of these trends, there is a clear local need to protect lives and property and ensure economic opportunity in response to changes we see today," Kirtman said.

The panel also heard from Leonard Berry, a professor emeritus of geosciences at Florida Atlantic University who co-founded Coastal Risk Consulting LLC. The Florida-based company has estimated Mar-a-Lago will eventually be under at least 1 foot of water for 210 days a year due to tidal flooding (Greenwire, Oct. 5, 2016).

Berry testified that the work of climate scientists depends on "the continued information flow from the federal government."

Nelson used the forum to stress his concerns about Trump's preliminary budget proposal, which includes cuts to climate science funding and monitoring resources.

The Interior Department's internal watchdog today largely cleared one of the National Park Service's former top superintendents of allegations of harassment and hostility toward women.

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Senate hearing spotlights 'political censorship' of science - E&E News

Egypt names Mubarak-era figures to head media watchdogs – ABC News

Egypt's president has picked three former leaders at state news organizations during the era of deposed autocrat Hosni Mubarak to lead new media watchdog agencies, part of measures to tighten his control over the country following a pair of horrific Islamic State church bombings last weekend.

The move comes just days after President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi publicly criticized media coverage of the deadly suicide bombings in the cities of Tanta and Alexandria north of Cairo, which killed at least 45 and injured scores. In televised comments just hours after the attacks, he said the media must keep the country's national interests in mind.

It raises concerns that the government plans to tighten its already firm grip on the media, in a country that already locks up journalists and has fallen to the bottom of press freedom indexes since el-Sissi overthrew the country's first democratically-elected president, a divisive Islamist.

Two of the men Makram Mohamed Ahmed, the former journalists' union head and Karam Gabr, former editor-in-chief of a state-owned newspaper were driven from their positions amid the 2011 uprising that ended Mubarak's 29-year reign. The third is Hussein Zein, who held a senior post at the Radio and Television Union in the Mubarak era.

El-Sissi made the picks for the chairmen of the Supreme Council for Media Regulation, the National Press Authority, and the National Media Authority based on a law that was passed in December, but which received new impetus after last Sunday's killings.

"The boards in their current form are dominated by executive authority representatives, to guarantee its control over state-owned and private media," said journalist Karem Mahmoud, who helped draft an early version the law.

But Mahmoud said that original draft it had since been amended by ministers and members of a heavily pro-el-Sissi parliament to further pare back press freedoms. The state-run al-Ahram newspaper said all but four of the 596-member unicameral legislature voted in favor.

"This isn't the law the committee proposed," Mahmoud told The Associated Press, noting that the final version had only 89 articles as opposed to an original 230 many of which had sought to lay out freedom of speech in line with Egypt's constitution.

Mahmoud believes the move, along with a similar draft bill that would allow el-Sissi to pick the nation's highest judges, would give the executive branch the authority "to silence any dissenting voice."

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Egypt names Mubarak-era figures to head media watchdogs - ABC News

Amazon Gives Parents More Control Over What Their Kids Do Online – Fortune

Amazon is giving parents more control over what their kids access through its children's entertainment app.

On Wednesday, Amazon debuted Parent Dashboard , a free website for parents to monitor the movies, TV shows, and books their children access through Amazon's FreeTime service. Amazon FreeTime, used by 10 million children, is a paid app for children under 13 that provides access to over 13,000 kid-friendly movies, TV shows, books, and YouTube videos.

With the Dashboard, parents can see a snapshot of their child's screen time on a given day. They can also see how much time was spent reading books, compared to TV shows, apps, or videos, or which websites their children visited.

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Amazon is also trying to help parents spark conversations about what their children do online through a new feature called Discussion Cards. In the dashboard, parents can click on a specific book or video to get a summary of what the content includes as well as sample questions they can ask children about it.

For example, a parent who clicked on a National Geographic book about pets may see a question like whats the difference between a canine and a feline? or which pet would you like and why?." Another suggestion might be to volunteer at the local animal shelter to help homeless dogs and cats.

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Amazon said that Discussion Cards have been created for thousands of the app's most popular titles. More cards will be added daily, the company says.

Amazon is adding parental controls as incentive to encourage more people to buy Amazon's Kindles , tablets, and media streaming services. The company is no longer just the "everything store" for toilet paper and books, but also an entertainment hub for people to buy and stream movies, TV shows, games, and music.

FreeTime is available as a mobile app on Amazon Kindles, as well as its line of Fire tablets, including its kids-focused edition, and its Fire TV media streaming stick. It's not available for Apple or Android devices.

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Amazon Gives Parents More Control Over What Their Kids Do Online - Fortune