In The News

Margaret Coker, Charles Levinson April 18, 2011
As protests surge, autocratic governments immediately shut down communications. The story of how skilled expatriates moved in to restore phone and internet services for Libya reads like a high-tech spy thriller. A Libyan-American telecom executive, 31 and raised in Alabama, organized a team of techie friends to assist in reopening communications for rebel forces. “[T]he network has enabled rebel...
Evgeny Morozov March 30, 2011
Like pen and paper, the internet is another tool that’s used for good or evil. Scholar Evgeny Morozov argues that the internet may have been less influential over recent uprisings in the Middle East. Savvy, repressive governments use the internet too, lifting bans on social media sites while jailing the most outspoken critics or baiting protesters with fake events followed by prosecution. “The...
Ian Shapira March 2, 2011
The internet contributed to Arab uprisings in North Africa, and worried leaders question what they consider control of the internet by the US. The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), a non-profit organization based in California under contract to the US government, maintains the database of web addresses. Representatives of Russia, China and other nations want the...
February 28, 2011
New communication technologies arm young activists with the tools to disrupt powerful, traditional institutions that simultaneously depend on the internet and apply excessive controls. Since 2005, a loose band of activists known as Anonymous have opposed censorship or a restricted internet, their plans and goals emerging amid fast, furious chatter of message boards. What began as sport in Japan...
Nick Miroff February 25, 2011
Alan Gross, a US contractor, awaits trial in Cuba on the charge of “Actions Against the Independence and Territorial Integrity of the State,” reports Nick Miroff for the Global Post. He’s charged with traveling to Cuba as a tourist with the intent of installing unrestricted internet access. Such unlicensed communications are forbidden by the Cuban government. His trial holds some broad foreign-...
Stephanie Kirchgaessner, Kathrin Hille February 17, 2011
Social media sites – like LinkedIn or Facebook – make it easy for companies to find customers, employees, suppliers and more. But they also help regulators uncover troublesome connections. Such a case – with US regulators perusing LinkedIn and accidentally discovering that China’s telecom giant Huawei had purchased, without government review, interest in a California firm that makes cloud...
Borje Ljunggren February 11, 2011
The internet, so essential for the modern economy, is a bane for autocratic governments thin-skinned about criticism, whose minions strive to eliminate any dissident thoughts or deeds. Internet and cell phones were less widely available in 1989, and global observers can’t help but wonder if such communications might have thwarted China’s violent crackdown on student protests at Tiananmen Square....