[liberationtech] Fwd: [tor-talk] New report: How Pakistan blocked news outlets, social media sites, and IM apps amidst protests
Cecilia Tanaka
cecilia.tanaka at gmail.com
Wed Nov 29 03:29:12 PST 2017
Hi, dear all! Hope everybody is doing great! :D
I think it will be very interesting to Arzak and some other members of
the LibTech list.
Take care and have an awesome day! <3
Ceci
PS to my friends: - No jokes, please. Everybody knows I was banned
from Tor-Talk List, but I always get what I want when I need it...
Life is too short for all that drama! ;)
-------
"Don't let anyone rob you of your imagination, your creativity, or
your curiosity. It's your place in the world; it's your life. Go on
and do all you can with it, and make it the life you want to live." -
Mae Jemison
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Maria Xynou <maria at openobservatory.org>
Date: Wed, Nov 29, 2017 at 9:05 AM
Subject: [tor-talk] New report: How Pakistan blocked news outlets,
social media sites, and IM apps amidst protests
To: tor-talk at lists.torproject.org
Hello,
Today, in collaboration with Bytes for All Pakistan, OONI published a
research study titled "How Pakistan blocked news outlets, social media
sites, and IM apps amidst protests".
Our study is available here:
https://ooni.torproject.org/post/how-pakistan-blocked-social-media/ and
http://content.bytesforall.pk/node/224
Last weekend, a number of social media sites and news outlets were
reportedly blocked in Pakistan during Islamist protests.
Through the collection and analysis of OONI network measurements from
Pakistan, we confirmed the DNS-based blocking of:
* 14 news websites
* Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram
* Facebook Messenger, Telegram, WhatsApp's web interface (web.whatsapp.com)
All of these censorship events were temporarily implemented last weekend
(25th & 26th November), and no longer seem to be in place (at least not in
the networks where tests were/are run). This highlights the need to
monitor internet censorship on an ongoing basis around the world.
In our previous study with Bytes for All
(https://ooni.torproject.org/post/pakistan-internet-censorship/),
Pakistani ISPs appeared to be applying "smart filters", selectively
blocking the HTTP versions of certain Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter
webpages, rather than blocking access to entire domains.
Last weekend, however, these sites were blocked entirely.
This is also the first time that we have collected technical evidence on
the censorship of news websites in Pakistan.
In addition to network measurement findings, our report also includes
censorship circumvention advice and information on how to reproduce this
study (in Pakistan or elsewhere).
Thanks for reading!
~ The OONI team.
--
Maria Xynou
Research and Partnerships Coordinator
Open Observatory of Network Interference (OONI)
https://ooni.torproject.org/
PGP Key Fingerprint: 2DC8 AFB6 CA11 B552 1081 FBDE 2131 B3BE 70CA 417E
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