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Sábado 19 de mayo de 2007

Censura neta que crece por todo el mundo

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Juan Leiden

La censura del contenido del Internet está creciendo a través del mundo. Un examen por la iniciativa neta abierta (ONI) a través de 41 países encontró que 25 aplicaron el contenido que se filtraba al acceso del bloque a los Web site particulares.

Usos del Web tales como mapas y Skype de Google así como los Web site “subversivos” ofrecidos en el contenido que bloquea listas. Hace cinco años solamente un “par” de estados ejercitaba controles similares, según Juan Palfrey del colegio de abogados de Harvard, uno de los investigadores que participaron en el estudio.

“There has also been an increase in the scale, scope, and sophistication of internet filtering,” he told the BBC.

“Few states are open about informing their citizens about internet controls. There’s no place you can get an answer as a citizen from your state about how they are filtering and what is being filtered,” Palfrey said, adding that filtering almost invariable happens “in the shadows”.

The extent of filtering varies between countries, with those in the Middle East among the most restrictive regimes. Burma, Iran, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Tunisia, the United Arab Emirates, and Yemen were among the states applying the heaviest use of the censor’s “blue pencil”. China, India, Singapore, South Korea, and Thailand all apply controls, albeit to a lesser extent.

Academics from the Universities of Toronto, Harvard Law School, Oxford, and Cambridge who make up the ONI reckon there are three main rationales for internet censorship: politics and power, state security, and the enforcement of social norms (such as a prohibition of pornography in Muslim states). Censorship nearly always falls across multiple categories. Controls, once applied, are often expanded to cover a broad range of content and used to increase government control of cyberspace.

Use of internet filtering leaves citizens with a restricted view of events unfolding around them, as well as restricting their knowledge of the outside world. The ONI study noted the growing use of techniques and tools used to circumvent filtering.

“It’s hard to quantify how many people are doing this. As we go forward each year we want to see if some of these circumvention technologies become more like appliances and you just plug them in and they work,” said Jonathan Zittrain, professor of internet governance and regulation at Oxford University. ®

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  • This entry was posted on Saturday, May 19th, 2007 at 10:02 pm and is filed under Surveillance . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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