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Tuesday, 13 March 2012

Which Countries Top the List of "INTERNET ENEMIES"?


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  1. Global media watchdog organization Reporters Without Borders
    has released its annual list of “Enemies of the Internet,” highlighting
    countries that restrict online freedom of expression.
    The list‘s release coincides with World Day Against Cyber
    Censorship, March 12, a day the organization started in 2008 to
    rally the world behind an open Internet.
    The list includes 12 “Internet Enemies” and 14 “countries under
    surveillance.”
    The Arab Spring, the social media-fueled protests that swept
    across the Arab world since December 2010, has led some
    countries to stiffen their Internet restrictions while others have
    loosened their controls.
    “The Internet and social networks have been conclusively
    established as tools for protest, campaigning and circulating
    information, and as vehicles for freedom,” the report says. “More
    than ever before, online freedom of expression is now a major
    foreign and domestic policy issue.”
    Following a revolution ousting dictator Muammar Gaddafi, Libya
    — in previous years considered an Internet Enemy — has been
    removed from both lists.
    Two countries, Bahrain and Belarus, have been moved from the
    “under surveillance” category into “Internet Enemies.” Over the
    last year, Bahrain restricted Internet access during protests and
    Belarus placed limitations on visiting foreign websites.
    The other 10 countries on the Internet Enemies list are Burma,
    China, Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Turkmenistan,
    Uzbekistan and Vietnam. The 14 under surveillance are Australia,
    Egypt, Eritrea, France, India, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Russia, South
    Korea, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Tunisia, Turkey and the United Arab
    Emirates.
    France’s spot on the list is of interest, considering Reporters
    Without Borders is a French NGO. According to the report, France
    requires surveillance because of a filtering law and a law that
    allows Internet access to be cut off from people who illegally
    download content.
    Australia, the other surprise country under surveillance, is on the
    list because of its national filtering system, which restricts access
    to child pornography sites and other domains deemed
    inappropriate.
    What do you think of the list? Are their any other countries
    Reporters Without Borders should have included?

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