Sell Out: Blocking an Open Net 
Posted by JonKatz on Tuesday November 27, @10:46AM
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/11/20/1651259

>From the corporatism:-peddle-censorship-for-cash dept.

Globalism ought to be a counterforce, democratizing the world 
and spreading technological and economic equality. Too often, it 
isn't. Take, for example, the corporatist American and European 
companies happily selling blocking software to countries like 
China and Saudi Arabia so their governments can pervert the Net 
to deny their citizens basic freedoms. This is a significant 
blow to the notion that technology will forge a more open world. 
And it might not be all that distant a threat. We have plenty of 
zealots and fanatics right here, all itching for a model way of 
blocking a free Net. 

Governments in Muslim nations, as well as China, have 
repeatedly made overtures to and done business with 
Net-filtering companies. But no nation has used blocking 
software as vigorously as Saudi Arabia, according to the New 
York Times. By royal decree, virtually all public Internet 
traffic to and from the kingdom has been funneled through a 
single control center outside Riyadh since the Net was first 
introduced there three years ago. If the Riyadh center blocks a 
site, a warning appears in both English and Arabic: "Access to 
the requested URL is not allowed!" Saudi Arabia blocks sex and 
pornography sites, as well as those relating to religion and 
human rights. 

Now nearly a dozen software companies, most American, are 
competing for a hefty new contract to help block access to even 
more sites the Saudi government deems inappropriate for its 
country's half-million Net users. In fact, the Saudi government 
is helping to pioneer something once thought impossible -- a 
sanitized Net for an entire nation and culture. 

American software companies are only too happy to help them do 
it. Software executives say they are only providing politically 
neutral tools. "Once we sell them the product, we can't enforce 
how they use it," Matthew Holt, a sales executive for San Jose's 
Secure Computing, told the Times earlier this week. Secure 
provides filtering software to the Saudi government under a 
contract that expires in 2003. The Saudi government is also 
reportedly talking with Websense, SurfControl and N2H2 of 
Seattle. 

The Saudi government has already spent a fortune to design its 
centralized control system before permitting Net use a few years 
ago, selecting Secure Computing's Smart Filter software from 
four competing U.S. products. SmartFilter came with ready-made 
blocking categories like pornography and gambling and was also 
customized to exclude sites the Saudis perceived as bad for 
Islam, the royal family, or the country's political positions. 

This is a radical assault on the spirit of the Net, of its 
open, point-to-point design, its great promise to democratize 
information. By allies, no less. And don't for a minute think 
there aren't plenty of fanatics and zealots in the United States 
who won't love the idea as well. Remember that the Harry Potter 
series is now the most banned book series in American libraries. 

The Saudi government, along with other non-democratic 
countries, are notoriously technophobic. They are eager to 
participate in the emerging global economy, but desperate to 
stanch the free flow of information that might provide diverse 
information to their citizens. And they have no problem finding 
software companies, including American ones, that are happy to 
help extend censorship. The corporatist rule is simple -- 
maximize profits at all costs under virtually all circumstances. 

Countries like Iraq, Saudi Arabia and China have been 
surprisingly successful at wiring up certain segments of their 
societies while controlling information deemed insensitive for 
political or religious reasons. The Net can, in fact, be used to 
make money and suppress freedom. These governments have undercut 
the great promise of globalism, prosperity, technology and 
democracy, allowing corrupt and anti-democratic governments to 
prosper, in part by censoring information -- something many of 
us thought the Net would make impossible. 

This highlights the menacing way corporatism exploits 
technology, undermining the most basic American values. 

"We have a really serious problem in terms of the American free 
speech idea," says Jack Balkin, a Yale Law School professor who 
specializes in the politics of Internet filtering. "But it is 
very American to make money. Between anti-censorship and the 
desire to make money, the desire to make money will win out." 
This is a profound blow to the whole idea of using technology -- 
especially the Net -- to force a more open society. 

That's a bitter indictment of a nation that purports to be 
advancing democracy throughout the world, that's supposedly 
fighting a war to protect freedom. The reason money will always 
win out is corporatism, which subverts almost every other value 
in the name of profit, and which has made globalism a dirty 
word. 

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