[liberationtech] ONI Summarized Global Internet Filtering Data Now Available for Download

Masashi Nishihata masashi at citizenlab.org
Thu Nov 3 10:41:50 PDT 2011


Hi Will,

Thanks for your interest in the data and questions. To clarify this data
does not include testing in US libraries or educational institutions in
the US, as the overview data is intended to document the depth and
breadth of national level filtering regimes rather than institutional
level. Also we do not test for child pornography content in any country
due to legal and ethical restrictions.  Because we have not collected
technical data to verify the depth and breadth of child pornography
content filtering or filtering in libraries and schools in the US the
social filtering measure is rated as no evidence.

While this data release is focused on national level filtering, research
into institutional level filtering in schools and libraries is an area
of interest for the ONI, which we have explored.  For example,  our
latest edited volume Access Contested: Security, Identity and Resistance
in Asian Cyberspace includes a chapter on institutional level filtering
in the Philippines "Competing Values Regarding Internet Use in  'Free' 
Philippine Social Institutions"  by Erwin A. Alampay, Joselito C. Olpoc,
and Regina M. Hechanova. The entire book is available for free download
from the International Development Research Centre here (and will be up
on opennet.net very soon):
http://idl-bnc.idrc.ca/dspace/bitstream/10625/47209/1/133582.pdf 

All best,
Masashi

-- 
Masashi Nishihata
Research Manager, Citizen Lab
Munk School of Global Affairs
University of Toronto

Web: http://www.citizenlab.org



On 03/11/2011 12:23 PM, Will Doherty wrote:
> Dear Masashi Nishihata,
>
> How can the OpenNet Initiative report document on a chart that there
> is "no evidence" of "Social" filtering in the United States when the
> report itself lists the effects of filtering technologies mandated by
> the Children's Internet Protection Act (CIPA)?
>
> Sincerely,
>
> Will Doherty
> Online Policy Group
>
> At 09:02 AM 11/3/2011, you wrote:
>> The OpenNet Initiative is pleased to announce the availability of our
>> summarized global Internet filtering data as a downloadable CSV file
>> under a Creative Commons license. The data provides an overview of the
>> most recent ONI ratings of the breadth and depth of Internet censorship
>> in seventy-four countries across four content categories (political,
>> social, Internet tools and conflict/security). This release makes ONI
>> data more accessible to researchers, journalists, and data mash-up
>> developers.
>>
>> The data is available on ourresearch<http://opennet.net/research>page
>> <http://opennet.net/research%3Epage>
>> (http://opennet.net/sites/opennet.net/files/ONI_data-20111102.zip
>> <http://opennet.net/research>), along with adescription of our
>> methodology
>> (http://opennet.net/sites/opennet.net/files/ONIDatareadme_Nov%202011.pdf
>> )
>>
>> This release is in part timed for Hack4Transparency
>> (http://www.euhackathon.eu/)being
>> <http://www.euhackathon.eu/%29being> held November 8-9, 2011 in
>> Brussels as
>> part of ONI support for the event.
>>
>> We are excited to see what the community does with this data and invite
>> feedback and suggestions for future releases.
>>
>> See Orginal blog post here:
>> http://opennet.net/blog/2011/11/oni-summarized-global-internet-filtering-data-now-available-download
>>
>>
>>
>> -- 
>> Masashi Nishihata
>> Research Manager, Citizen Lab
>> Munk School of Global Affairs
>> University of Toronto
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> liberationtech mailing list
>> liberationtech at lists.stanford.edu
>>
>> Should you need to change your subscription options, please go to:
>>
>> https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech
>>
>> If you would like to receive a daily digest, click "yes" (once you
>> click above) next to "would you like to receive list mail batched in
>> a daily digest?"
>>
>> You will need the user name and password you receive from the list
>> moderator in monthly reminders.
>>
>> Should you need immediate assistance, please contact the list moderator.
>>
>> Please don't forget to follow us on
>> http://twitter.com/#!/Liberationtech
>> <http://twitter.com/#%21/Liberationtech>





More information about the liberationtech mailing list