Eric S Johnson: > For the record, Burma/Myanmar (MM) has very little cybercensorship > now (the previous censorship started loosening up in about August > 2011 and was basically—not entirely, but mostly—dropped by the end of > October 2011). >
Hi, I've just returned from Burma in the last month. There is total surveillance in Burma on the commercial YTP ISP. They censor plenty of sites and their BlueCoat proxy devices fail to deliver content for unblocked sites often. The other networks seem rather under surveillance as well and they also have censorship. We (OONI) have data from my trip there and it includes all of the major networks. We'll write it up and publish all of it soon. > I’ve been visiting MM since the mid-aughts and have never encountered > FidoNet there. Haven’t seen it since Africa, mid-nineties. But that > doesn’t mean it wasn’t/isn’t there. > I haven't seen FidoNet but I did see lots of WiMax, VSAT, GSM/CDMA and even some discussion of X.25, etc. > > > (Vietnam still has a measurable amount of online censorship, but it’s > not nearly as heavy-handed as China’s or Iran’s. It’s more like > Ethiopia’s. > Ethiopia has extremely sophisticated censorship: https://blog.torproject.org/blog/ethiopia-introduces-deep-packet-inspection https://blog.torproject.org/blog/update-censorship-ethiopia > Some of Cambodia’s ~30 ISPs censor a half-dozen sites, but that’s > hardly serious (the largest, Vietnamese-controlled, ISP doesn’t!).) > The serious problem is the infrastructure even if today it is only used on a few sites. All the best, Jake -- Unsubscribe, change to digest, or change password at: https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech
