Saturday, April 28, 2012
A Blind Activist? Yes Indeed
Recently there has been some attention directed towards China, after a blind activist named Chan Guangcheng escaped from his home while under house arrest to expose his abuse under the guards. What makes this feat even more amazing despite the fact that he is blind and that this is China that we're talking about, is that he had to get past 90 guards in order to do so. Jailed for four years for posting information on corruption and manipulation in his community, Chen was under house arrest as parole. Having been thwarted before in attempted to escape and weary from continuous beating from his captors, Chen finally scaled a wall surrounding his compound and sprinted to safety with the help of fellow activists who had kept in communication with Chen. It has also been reported that three of the dissidents that aided Chen in his escape have now disappeared, likely abducted by police. With Chen now rumored to be at the US embassy in Beijing, China has a mess on its hands. With annual talked between the US and China coming up, strain has been put on US-Chinese relations, adding to the humiliation China suffered from the case of Bo Xilai, the center of a cascading scandal that cost him his seat in the Politburo and exposed a level of mistrust among top officials in the one-party state.Will this lead to serious talks over China's reputation of corruption, manipulation, cover-ups and silencing of dissidents? The US will have to take a stance now, and whether that stance be one of accusation, support, or neutrality has yet to be seen.
Thursday, April 26, 2012
Essay Part 4
Part 4:
Today companies hold more power with the Internet than they ever
have before. They have the power to decide what to do with privacy and whether
or not to comply with governments when it comes to regulation of the Internet.
The Internet ushered in a new era of free speech, information, and privacy, but
it has also helped the opposite side of the spectrum by allowing governments to
censor information flowing through it as well as by keeping tabs on their
citizens. While this comes in varying levels of intensities, it is seen in all
governments, be they democratic or not. Companies also play an integral part in
the control of the Internet, as they have power over their users and consumers,
being able to decide what to enforce and how to take sides on issues. Recently,
with the heated debate over rights involving the Internet, free speech, and
privacy, more and more companies recognize the need for a free, neutral Internet,
or net neutrality as some put it. Rebecca Mackinnon offers solutions to many of
these problems by proposing regulation of the Internet by governments and companies’
hand-in-hand, in order to establish fair systems and ensure rights are being
protected. Without this crucial cooperation, companies won’t be able to be held
accountable by the networked through the government and the government won’t be
able to enforce any legislation without the support of companies. Whether or
not this will happen is another issue. Time will tell whether or not control of
the Internet will be decided by the consent of the networked.
Thanks for reading and feel free to leave feedback and comments!
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Essay Part 3
Part 3:
As you can see here, Yahoo! was prodded by Chinese officials to
hand over the information regarding the owner of the email address in question.
In this case they did, breaking the trust they had with Shi Tao and basically
handing him over to receive a prison sentence. There are deeper problems with
this though. First off, we need to start with how companies operate in China.
Basically, in order to operate a business on the Internet in China, you have to
first get a license. This license binds you to Chinese law regarding the Internet,
which means you have to comply with censorship laws. This leads to companies
enforcing Chinese censorship laws and requests from the government to hand over
information, or else risk the revocation of their business license. If this
seems corrupt, it’s because it is. Both sides can be said to partake in the
corrupt nature of this deal, as the companies know what they are getting into.
This leads us to our second problem, the problem with companies themselves.
Since there is little legislation that dictates consumer-corporate interaction
on the Internet, companies are often left to make their own policies regarding
these types of situations. In these cases their rules stay inflexible, which
can lead to what some call human rights breaches. By revealing Shi Tao’s
identity, Yahoo! breached his right of privacy and free speech. Despite the fact that it was acceptable
within its own code of conduct and China’s laws, it was in violation of the
UN’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights, specifically articles 17 and 19. In
this case Yahoo! acted according to it Chinese law in order to keep its
license, however many call Yahoo! out for not taking into consideration the
human rights aspect.
Corporations always have their own set of rules, a code for them
to follow in order to do efficient business and keep things running smoothly.
Such is the case with Facebook and other sites. With Facebook, creating an
account under a fake name is against their policy. This policy makes sense in
order to uphold an enjoyable atmosphere and create a stable business
enterprise. No one wants to go onto Facebook and see twelve different accounts
saying they are the same person. However, Facebook doesn’t take into account
different situations where revealing ones identity may be the difference
between life and death. Take for example the revolutionaries in Egypt. Many
banded together on Facebook via pseudonyms, in order to protect themselves from
Mubarak’s regime and the consequences they would face if caught. However, since
most of their pages on Facebook are created by someone with a pseudonym
character, Facebook removed them. This created uproar in the activist
community, as many felt vulnerable and deceived. There are other instances
where people have been inadvertently affected by new privacy settings that come
with a new release of a product as well. When Google Plus changed its policy
regarding privacy, it made it so people could see other peoples contacts,
information, real names, everything. It was either this way or leave. This took
many activists by surprise and they had to scramble to leave before their
identities were revealed and they themselves prosecuted by their government.
Sunday, April 22, 2012
Essay Part 2
Part 2:
Censorship of the Internet has become an increasingly troublesome
problem, with regimes in Syria, Libya, Egypt and China all exacting control
over their citizens on the web. Recent examples of attempted censorship and
control in more democratic countries include PIPA and SOPA of the US. These acts would allow for the removal of
websites via request and for the censorship of information by websites in order
to maintain legality. International effort from the European Union as well as
western countries such as the US to ratify ACTA also posed a serious threat to
internet freedom (ACTA being a stronger version of SOPA/PIPA). These bills were
criticized by human rights organization for not having safeguards in place to
prevent abuse of power in taking down copyright infringing cases. Due to the
language of the SOPA bill, many feared that it would allow free speech to be
censored and lead to overzealous regulation of the Internet. Also brought up
was the fact that the main supporters were large corporations which would
propose such a bill to increase their own profits at the expense of what many
people consider basic rights. Corporations such as Coca-Cola, Visa, Viacom,
Capitol Records Nashville, Time Warner, and the MPAA were/are all supporters of
the bill, along with dozens more. (House Judiciary Committee, 2011), A key
example of this being the idea of innocent until proven guilty, which would be
overlooked in these bills as requests of site takedowns would be honored first
and it would be up to the site to provide evidence, not the requester. The MPAA
and other Hollywood entertainment companies such as Time Warner lobbied for the
passing of the bills and spent millions in pushing them through congress. This
type of corporate interference is unfortunately all too common in the digital
age, as corporations try to maximize profit by cutting theirs losses—often from
the Internet.
Besides trying to censor the Internet through legislation,
corporations also infringe on our perceived moral rights through their own ways
as well. There are many incidents where corporations such as Yahoo!, Facebook,
Twitter, Google, and other social media companies endanger the rights and
sometimes lives of people in restrictive countries. For example, MacKinnon
details the case of Shi Tao, a reporter who is now serving a 10-year prison
sentence for sending an email containing military procedures. However, the
charges of “divulging state secrets abroad” were not reasonable, as the
military procedures and policies were available on the state military’s website
and Shi Tao received them from a non-secretive presentation. However, this did
not stop the Chinese government from silencing his less-than-praising voice on
the issues. But the rights violations on behalf of the Chinese government are
not the only ones here. According to Human Rights Watch, an international NGO
focused on the research on and advocacy for human rights,
In its case against Shi Tao, the prosecution charged that he
improperly took notes on the memorandum as it was being discussed at an
editorial meeting at the newspaper and then hours later sent an outline of its
contents by email to be published in an overseas web forum under a pseudonym.
Evidence presented during the trial included account verification information
provided by Yahoo! Holdings (Hong Kong) Ltd., which linked the IP address used
to send the email from Shi Tao's personal Yahoo! email account to a computer
located in the Contemporary Business News office.
(Human Rights Watch, August 2006)
Saturday, April 21, 2012
Essay Part 1
Lately in AP Lang we've had to write an essay on a book while both reviewing it as well as an overall topic it covers. For mine I've read Rebecca MacKinnon's Consent of the Networked which touches on the impact of the Internet as well as privacy concerns and regulatory concerns and their implications. Thanks for reading and feel free to leave feedback and comments! Here's the first part:
Control of the Internet
in the Modern Age
Parker Bennett
Consent of the
Networked: The Worldwide Struggle for Internet Freedom
By Rebecca MacKinnon
Basic Books, 320 pp., $26.99
January 25, 2011: Hossam el-Hamalawy joins thousands
of others to take to the streets in Egypt as their “Day of Rage” begins.
Organizing protests through social media sites like Facebook and Twitter,
activists are able to put together highly visible and effective demonstrations
that elicit a response from the police. Soon protests are happening nation-wide
as Egypt experiences a modern revolution, attracting international attention.
On the third day of protests, Internet and phone services are cut off in the
Cairo area, severely disrupting communication between activists. This is only
part of the Egyptian government’s control over the citizens. Late Friday night,
Hossam el-Hamalawy along with numerous other protestors storm the offices of
the SSI in Nasr City. He visits the cell where he had been imprisoned for
anti-government sentiments and beaten, later writing on his Twitter feed that
he could not stop crying. Also discovered in the compound are thousands of
documents and files on citizens, with text message transcripts, Internet
postings, photos, dossiers, and other privacy-infringing records of Egyptian
citizens. As the regime built around Hosni Mubarak (the dictatorial president
of Egypt at the time) crumbles in the following weeks, more and more evidence comes
to light of the extent of which the Egyptian government kept surveillance on
its citizens, as well as the extent of how far it went to control their access
to freedom: The Internet.
The
Internet has become the most important innovation of the modern age, connecting
billions of users across the world, encouraging cooperation between people on a
global scale and allowing for the sharing of ideas, photos, information,
videos, and more. Even though it can create an open and free society, it can
also help those who wish to force control on people, or monitor them. This dual
use of the Internet is discussed in length in Rebecca MacKinnon’s book, The Consent of the Networked. As well as
discussing the role of the Internet in repressive governments and its role in
fighting for freedom, MacKinnon focuses on threats to the Internet, which
include authoritarian regimes, but also corporations and legislature which can
interfere with free speech and privacy rights. These areas of focus are the key points
Mackinnon uses in her book to prove her point that action needs to be taken in
regards to the Internet and freedom of speech/privacy concerns. As she says in
the beginning of the book,
It is time to stop debating whether the Internet is an effective
tool for political expression, and to move on to the much more urgent question
of how digital technology can be structured, governed, and used to maximize the
good it can do in the world, and minimize the evil….
The reality is that the corporations and governments that build,
operate, and govern cyberspace are not being held sufficiently accountable for
their exercise of power over the lives and identities of people who use digital
networks. They are sovereigns operating without the consent of the networked.
(MacKinnon, pp. 34 )
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
Break #7
I figure its about time to start advertising my favorite artists. Specifically, those who are still up-and-coming. Someone like Madeon. A 17-year-old from Nantes, France, Madeon has broken into the electropop/house scene with his excellent remixes. Starting out with his remix of The Island by Pendalum, he quickly rose to internet fame through his other remixes of Deadmau5's Raise Your Weapon and Pop Culture, a mashup of 39 different songs. Pop Culture definitely went viral immediately after posting, racking up more than 6 million hits in a few days. Now at over 10 million, Pop Culture is definitely one of his coolest songs to date. Having played on BBC Radio 1 and now about to perform live at Coachella, Lollapalooza, and the Ultra Music Festival in Miami, Madeon has begun his live performance debut. Keep an eye on him, because he just might be going somewhere.
Also, Nathan Barnatt, one of my favorite YouTube celebrities, has done a couple of dance videos to his songs. Check them out!
Also, Nathan Barnatt, one of my favorite YouTube celebrities, has done a couple of dance videos to his songs. Check them out!
Sunday, April 15, 2012
CISPA- Yet another Kill-Bill
The Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act now has more than
105 co-sponsors, and some fear the bill could go further than SOPA and PIPA in threatening online privacy. SOPA and PIPA were finally discarded earlier this year after resounding online protest changed the debate, but the same doesn’t yet appear to be the case with CISPA.
According to the Electronic Frontier Foundation, H.R. 3523 “would let companies spy on users and share private information with the federal government and other companies with near-total immunity from civil and criminal liability. It effectively creates a ‘cybersecurity’ exemption to all existing laws.”
The bill could sneak through Congress quickly once it’s back in session, so be sure to track its progress.
Once again the Internet is just another frontier that governments and corporations -- sometimes both intermingled in a corrupt haze-- just can't ignore. They have to control this thing thet keeps biting their hand. So of course they put out these stupid, irresponsible, ignorant bills to try to do exactly that: control something that threatens them.
According to the Electronic Frontier Foundation, H.R. 3523 “would let companies spy on users and share private information with the federal government and other companies with near-total immunity from civil and criminal liability. It effectively creates a ‘cybersecurity’ exemption to all existing laws.”
The bill could sneak through Congress quickly once it’s back in session, so be sure to track its progress.
Once again the Internet is just another frontier that governments and corporations -- sometimes both intermingled in a corrupt haze-- just can't ignore. They have to control this thing thet keeps biting their hand. So of course they put out these stupid, irresponsible, ignorant bills to try to do exactly that: control something that threatens them.
So in order to stall CISPA we can start by contacting our reps in congress.
As always its best to contact them by phone, you can find your rep details here:
Other coverage:
Also, help reviewing the text of bill itself would be good.
As always its best to contact them by phone, you can find your rep details here:
Other coverage:
- Forget SOPA, You Should Be Worried About This Cybersecurity Bill
- Draconian ‘Privacy Invasion Bill’ Continues to Gain Support
- Even worse than SOPA: New CISPA cybersecurity bill will censor the Web
- SOPA changes name to CISPA
Also, help reviewing the text of bill itself would be good.
Break #6
Yet again the lovely break post comes around. This time our break video highlights a unique KFC in Egypt, which is run entirely by deaf employees. They communicate to each other via sign language and customers point to what they want on a menu on the counter. I personally think this is an incredible achievement, especially in providing equal opportunity employment for those with disabilities. But I also think its really rad at the same time. One must wonder though, how does the drive thru work?
Thursday, April 12, 2012
The Wheels of Justice
Recently, some peace has been had by the Family of Trayvon Martin as state prosecutors have announced they will be charging George Zimmerman with second-degree murder, the highest offense that could be charged. This comes after the ill-received announcement that no grand jury was to be used in deciding whether or not to charge Zimmerman with anything. Now that those fears have been put to rest, the Martin family can breath a short sigh of relief. Recently arrested and being held at the Seminole County jail, he is currently waiting for court proceeding and bail to begin. The Miami Herald has a good step by step of what happens next legally:
"• George Zimmerman faces a charge of second-degree murder with a firearm, a first-degree felony punishable by a minimum of 25 years in prison and up to life behind bars. The charge is a non-bondable offense, which means Zimmerman does not have the immediate right to post bail.
• He will be booked into a Seminole County jail and should appear Thursday in court for a first hearing and arraignment.
• Zimmerman will certainly plead not guilty and his defense attorney has said he will ask that his client be allowed to post bond and be released from custody.
• Within 15 days, prosecutors must start providing Zimmerman’s defense attorney with “discovery,” the first witness statements, police reports and photos that will be used as evidence against him. Most of the evidence will be released to the public and media, although the substance of any of his confessions can be withheld before trial.
• Once all the evidence has been provided to Zimmerman’s defense team, his lawyer can file a motion for immunity under Florida’s Stand Your Ground self-defense law. A judge must hold an evidentiary hearing and decide by a “preponderance of the evidence” whether Zimmerman was acting in self-defense.
• If a judge denies his motion for immunity, a date will be set for a trial in front of a jury. Zimmerman’s defense attorney could also ask for a “change of venue,” meaning he could be tried in a different county in Florida if a judge deems pretrial publicity has been so overwhelming that it is impossible for the defendant to get a fair trial."
The trial of George Zimmerman will no doubt be one of high profile, as people across the country have voiced their support for the Martin family and against Zimmerman through protests, walk-outs, and marches. Much like in the Casey Anthony case a while back, it seems that in this case George Zimmerman has already been tried by the media. The majority opinion on the case is that this is a travesty of justice and that he's obviously guilty. Not that I'm saying he is innocent, the evidence does seem to indicate he acted with menace, but I'm saying that America as a whole needs to recognize that there's already been too much of a decision on the case already and that we need to wait for the courts of law to figure it out.
" George Zimmerman, accused of murdering unarmed teenager Trayvon Martin, was once an anonymous loan officer in a Florida suburb. He is now a reviled symbol of racial profiling, vigilante justice and everything broken about race relations in America.With the notoriety that has come from press coverage, there is no doubt in my mind that at the very least he will be convicted of some crime, and when he is the whole nation will know about it.
Whether or not Zimmerman deserves that onus, a pending trial may be a vehicle for the nation to sort publicly through some of these issues. But on a personal level, Zimmerman has been the focus of so much media coverage and extraordinary public vitriol that legal experts say an impartial jury may be difficult to find to weigh his claim of self-defense for the shooting.
"We have to worry about his ability to get a fair trial," said Gabriel J. Chin, a law professor at the University of California, Davis. "There is a risk that he's convicted based on media impressions and popular sentiments rather than evidence."
Zimmerman can seek a bail hearing under Florida law, but his notoriety has diminished his chances for release, at least in the immediate future. On Thursday, Mark O'Mara, Zimmerman's defense attorney, said he would wait at least a few weeks before seeking bail, in an attempt to "calm this case down."
Zimmerman's arrest and incarceration on Wednesday marked the beginning of a new chapter in a case that has raised questions about much more than the murky circumstances around the killing of an unarmed teenager. For many, the case has come to represent all of the injustices faced not just by blacks in Sanford but by minority communities across the country, where issues of racial profiling, 'stop and frisk' searches and police brutality remain hot button issues.
Without mass rallies and media attention, the shooting would have very likely gone unremarked on the local crime blotter. Instead, Martin's case has become a cause, a national phenomenon with competing interests often drawn along racial lines. Meanwhile, the case could prove pivotal in the fight to repeal Florida's controversial Stand Your Ground laws.
In the process, Zimmerman's life has been threatened, and lawyers and national media have dragged the skeletons of Zimmerman's violent past out into the light. Posters made from a 2005 mugshot of Zimmerman -- looking chubby and bleary-eyed in a jail-issued orange jumpsuit -- have been hoisted at rallies and protests.
Everyone from the president of the United States to former heavyweight champion Mike Tyson have weighed in on the case, with Tyson saying of Zimmerman in an interview Thursday with Yahoo Sports that "it's a disgrace that man hasn't been shot yet." "
Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/04/11/2743345/after-zimmermans-arrest-what-happens.html#moreb#storylink=cpy
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