I think this is a very relevant position for the nettime public, coming
from xnet, right in the middle between progressive politics and critical
digital culture...

very best,
oliver


*XNET'S REPORT ON CATALAN REFERENDUM: DIGITAL REPRESSION AND RESISTANCE:*

https://xnet-x.net/en/digital-repression-and-resistance-catalan-referendum/

============

*REPRESSION AND DIGITAL RESISTANCE IN THE #CATALANREFERENDUM: Successes
and failures in the use of digital tools in Catalonia’s rebellion *

The battle presently being fought in the streets and polling stations in
towns and cities throughout Catalonia before, during and after October
1, in which a diverse civil society has come together in huge numbers,
putting their bodies and knowledge in the service of the shared goal of
defending what is considered to be real democracy, has also had a
crucial battleground in the case of the Internet.


/*September 7, 2017*/

On September 7, 2017, the Constitutional Court declared the referendum
in Catalonia illegal.
(<https://www.reuters.com/article/us-spain-politics-catalonia-court/spains-constitutional-court-suspends-catalan-referendum-law-court-source-idUSKCN1BI2TE>https://www.reuters.com/article/us-spain-politics-catalonia-court/spains-constitutional-court-suspends-catalan-referendum-law-court-source-idUSKCN1BI2TE)
Thenceforth, the Spanish government embarked on legal, police, and
administrative persecution of any “device or instrument that is to be
used for preparing or holding the referendum”, including ballot boxes
and papers which were now criminal objects. Websites, apps and tools
related with the referendum were closed on the Internet.

Independently of whether one agrees or disagrees with the decision of
the Spanish courts to ban the referendum, the closing of many regular
Internet spaces can be viewed, in a great number of cases, as a grave
violation of freedom of expression—and especially freedom of political
opinion—which is protected in international treaties and by Article 11
of the European Union’s Charter of Fundamental Rights
(http://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_e
<http://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_es.pdf#page=11>n.pdf#page=11
<http://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_es.pdf#page=11>) on
“Freedom of expression and information”. While some websites, apps and
domains belong to the Generalitat (Government) of Catalonia and were
tools directly linked with organizing the referendum, many others were
of private individuals or associations, and basically reflect political
opinions. It is clear that one thing—arguable or not—is banning a
referendum and quite another is *blocking, while they were at it, the
right to express one’s political opinion *that the referendum should be
held.

In the last few days, Catalonia has been the testing ground of what we
have always denounced or, in other words, the fact that the space of the
Internet has yet again been subjected to a state of exception which
“democratic” governments wouldn’t dare to apply to physical space
because this violation of rights would immediately be visible. Proof of
this is that many of the shut-down websites belong to associations with
physical premises but no authority has risked ordering that these
centers should be closed.

Internet access is essential for the exercise of our freedoms and should
be considered in itself a fundamental right #KeepItOn.
https://www.accessnow.org/keepiton/

*If we let the space of the Internet become the first casualty in the
curtailment of basic rights, we can be sure that the next step will be
to limit those rights in other spaces as well.*


/*September 13, 2017*/

On September 13 a court order shut down the web page
/referendum.cat/(<http://www.catalannews.com/politics/item/catalan-government-opens-new-referendum-website-after-original-is-shut-down-by-spain>http://www.catalannews.com/politics/item/catalan-government-opens-new-referendum-website-after-original-is-shut-down-by-spain).
Thus began a game of cat-and-mouse between the Spanish government (with
its state repression) and the Catalan government.

Some citizens published the referendum web code in Github. After this,
clones of the website began to appear, created by volunteer citizens in
domains with names like /piolin.cat /(where /piolin/refers to Tweetie
Pie, painted on the boat accommodating Spanish police)/,
//referendum.ninja o marianorajoy.cat/, while alternative sites were
also made available by the Generalitat itself.

The police operation continues with domains being shut down and access
blocked to all these sites as well as many other web pages with opinions
about the referendum, including those of associations, sports clubs and
private sites. All of this was occurring against a background of
politicians being arrested and presidents of civil society associations
being charged with sedition.


*In ten days more than 140 websites were blocked. *The project OONI by
Tor includes a non-exhaustive list of affected domains and information
on the type of block
(https://ooni.torproject.org/post/internet-censorship-catalonia-independence-referendum/).

As part of this state operation, the *Guardia Civil raided the
headquarters of **Top Level Domain */*.cat*/, confiscating IT equipment
and data, and detaining one of its IT staff. This disproportionate
measure, which is unprecedented in the European Union, implies the
possibility of opening the way for something we have been struggling
against for years, namely *domain managers being held responsible for
content*.

The UN Rapporteur on Freedom of Opinion and Expression, the Internet
Society, the Electronic Founder Foundation, and many other organizations
like our own have condemned this blocking of websites and the inordinate
digital repression carried out by the Spanish government just days
before the referendum was held, which meant that there was no chance to
establish their validity, suitability and legality because they left no
time to do so.

(<https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2017/09/cat-domain-casualty-catalonian-independence-crackdown>https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2017/09/cat-domain-casualty-catalonian-independence-crackdown

<https://www.internetsociety.org/news/statements/2017/internet-society-statement-internet-blocking-measures-catalonia-spain/>https://www.internetsociety.org/news/statements/2017/internet-society-statement-internet-blocking-measures-catalonia-spain/

<http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=22176&LangID=E>http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=22176&LangID=E
<http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=22176&LangID=E>)


In this situation of persecution**and*very serious violation of rights*,
many people, moved by their convictions and without proper legal advice,
have exposed themselves to risks which could have been avoided in some
cases, and have left their identities at the mercy of a repressive
apparatus that needs scapegoats to justify its actions. The open use of
names among the alleged authors of the first mirror sites has meant that
the authorities are now boasting that they have rounded up the young
perpetrators (as many as 14)
(<http://www.europapress.es/catalunya/noticia-libertad-cargos-13-investigados-clonar-webs-referendum-20170925193606.html>http://www.europapress.es/catalunya/noticia-libertad-cargos-13-investigados-clonar-webs-referendum-20170925193606.html).
Some of them face very serious charges like “heading a seditious
organization” which, as everyone knows, makes no sense at all in a free,
open space like the Internet. These are definitely measures that aim to
inflict disproportionate punishment so as to bully and intimidate
citizens in an attempt to discourage their intense online activity.
(<http://www.eldiario.es/cv/val/policia-proreferendum-Valencia-cabecilla-desobediencia_0_692231117.html>http://www.eldiario.es/cv/val/policia-proreferendum-Valencia-cabecilla-desobediencia_0_692231117.html).


One of the most common errors made by citizens has been their frequent
use of servers with few and poor legal guarantees for the client. A case
in point is the insistent use of .cat domains. These come under the
control of .es, and therefore the Spanish state, which shows no concern
for civil rights, in contrast with other generic domains (.net, .org,
.com...) with are overseen by ICANN and other organizations that do
respect basic rights.

We believe that it is important to stress that *we shouldn’t need
martyrs to prove that our struggles are just*. We must make every
possible effort to ensure that the people who are struggling for their
rights don’t suffer reprisals. In this regard, Xnet has tried to give an
overall explanation of how to avoid this and other useful information in
a Guide
(<https://xnet-x.net/en/how-to-guide-for-preserving-fundamental-rights-internet/>https://xnet-x.net/en/how-to-guide-for-preserving-fundamental-rights-internet/)that
seeks to protect people who work with the Internet from unjust
repression. This initiative is part of a set of actions designed by the
lawyers and organizations of #SomDefensores to defend basic rights.


NETDEMOCRACY: DISTRIBUTED GOVERNMENT

We have seen a Generalitat that is competent and farsighted in its
online activity but, in particular, we also note that the acceleration
of events in Catalonia has catalyzed the population into a massive use
of digital tools in defense of their basic rights. Unlike similar
situations, such as that in Turkey for example, the Catalan institutions
have agreed in recent days to *cede and share, in a widely distributed
manner, responsibility for safeguarding freedoms*, thus regularizing
what we see as the embryo of what could be a *truly transversal
democracy worthy of the digital age*, as some of us have already
proposed in our discussion of the methodology of the deviceRed Ciudadana
Partido X
(<https://partidox.org/en/><https://partidox.org/en/>https://partidox.org/en/
<https://partidox.org/en/>).


The president of Catalonia, Carles Puigdemont—thanks also to help from
international experts who have actively and continually been engaged in
providing advice for the defense of rights (people like Julian Assange
and Peter Sunde)—have recommended the use of proxies in social networks
in order to gain access to blocked websites
(<https://twitter.com/KRLS/status/909126641145798656>https://twitter.com/KRLS/status/909126641145798656).
He subsequently announced that IPFS
(<https://twitter.com/KRLS/status/911482634789953536>https://twitter.com/KRLS/status/911482634789953536)
had also been used as a distributed tool for housing the website giving
citizens information about where they should go to vote.


/*September 23, 2017*/

On September 23, the High Court of Justice of Catalonia ordered the
“*blocking of websites and domains [giving this information] which are
publicized in any account or official social network of any kind*”
(<http://www.elmundo.es/cataluna/2017/09/23/59c69496468aeb8c7f8b45bb.html>http://www.elmundo.es/cataluna/2017/09/23/59c69496468aeb8c7f8b45bb.html).
This was not just a matter of a specific list of sites but a general
order giving a free hand to forces of security in ordering Internet
providers to shut down websites.


With these new powers, the Guardia Civil blocked the domain
gateway.ipfs.io
(<https://twitter.com/AlexHinojo/status/911900292152791041>https://twitter.com/AlexHinojo/status/911900292152791041)
and thereby cut off connection, not only to the referendum website, but
also to all content from the Spanish state hosted in IPFS through this
gateway. The shutdown extended to websites of nongovernmental
organizations and movements like /empaperem.cat, assemblea.cat y
webdelsi.cat/which are in favor of the referendum. This carrying out of
the court order also extended to GooglePlay, which was forced to
withdraw the app allowing people to find information about where to vote.


Nevertheless, *at all times the whole population of Catalonia has been
able to keep informed about polling stations*thanks to continuous
*replication*and *massive use of VPN and anonymous browsing *in order to
access sites that were blocked from Spain. This capacity for *action
distributed between the government and organized citizens*has been the
trend throughout the electoral process, with large-scale use of chats,
networks and other tools that have allowed swift circulation of
information circulated on the micro-scale and among strangers who are
working together to deal with hoaxes, leaks and infiltrations.

This *networked action*by means of which people have, for example,
organized themselves, polling station by polling station, has also been
manifest in physical spaces, for example with regard to protecting the
ballot boxes from police seizure
(<http://www.ara.cat/tema_del_dia/referendum-Que-gestar-se-Elna_0_1880212030.html>http://www.ara.cat/tema_del_dia/referendum-Que-gestar-se-Elna_0_1880212030.html).


For a month, the state security forces and their secret services have
been searching all over Catalonia for the ballot boxes and voting
papers. Although they have raided printers, media offices and
headquarters of political parties and other organizations—sometimes
without a court order—*the ballot boxes were never found, yet they
magically appeared in the polling stations*. The ballot boxes and papers
were there—they were everywhere—guarded by *small groups, autonomous
nodes*, and spread all around Catalonia.


/*October 1, referendum day*/

Finally, even as the referendum was taking place on October 1, the
Spanish government tried to block, by every means it could, the
possibility of accessing the “universal census” app of the entire
electoral register.

The domain /registremeses.com /where the app was hosted was immediately
blocked. The Generalitat quickly supplied the more than 1,000 polling
stations throughout Catalonia with alternative IPs for access. We
believe that, in this case, it probably would have been better to work
with Hidden Service in order to avoid police harassment and DDoS attacks
by groups opposing the referendum.

Internet connection was also interrupted
(<http://www.ara.cat/tema_del_dia/Violencia-tambe-digital-contra-referendum_0_1880212015.html>http://www.ara.cat/tema_del_dia/Violencia-tambe-digital-contra-referendum_0_1880212015.html)
and it is not yet known who is responsible. Could it have been Internet
suppliers obeying state orders (although they deny it)?

However, the polling stations still managed to function, almost all of
them routing the smartphones of the volunteers in order to access the
Internet*. In the street, people were chorusing “airplane mode”*so as to
save network bandwidth for people working inside the polling stations.
The operation lasted from 5 a.m.—which is when citizens began filling
the streets to protect the polling stations—until midnight when the vote
count ended. All this was achieved in the midst of violent charges by
National Police with a toll of more than 800 wounded. Despite
everything, more than 2,200,000 people came out to vote.


ORDER IS THE PEOPLE, EQUAL TO EQUAL: DISORDER IS THIS STATE AND ITS VIOLENCE

*The citizens and government of Catalonia have learned and are witnesses
to the fact that in the front line of defense of our democracy, digital
resistance depends on our use of technological tools which allow us to
protect our rights autonomously and in a well distributed manner*. We
hope that the Catalan government will never forget this and that its
administration will always resist the temptation of the usual kind of
discourse that criminalizes tools protecting privacy, encryption and
decentralization of the Internet.


Moreover, when repression was massively unleashed in streets and
villages of Catalonia, the social networks and their intelligent use by
citizens were once again used to put an end to the blocking and
manipulation of information by the mainstream media in Spain, and to let
the international media outlets know what was really happening. Perhaps
in 2017, many people were already used to this, but it is also highly
possible that there have never been so many published videos and
photographs documenting police violence as there have been this time
(<https://twitter.com/joncstone/status/914450692416397312>https://twitter.com/joncstone/status/914450692416397312).


*Without the widespread use of social networks to testify and inform,
the people of Catalonia would have been totally isolated and crushed
with absolute impunity.*

>From this point of view, what has been happening in the last few days is
historic. This acceleration towards a greater degree of democracy and
more power in civil society is happening spontaneously but the
*ignorance of most people about some aspects of the digital milieu is
exposing them to risks*and, in this regard, this is what we must make,
and are making, every effort to avoid
(https://xnet-x.net/en/how-to-guide-for-preserving-fundamental-rights-internet/).


/*October 1, 2017 as a beginning*/

On October 1, 2017 *the politicians were nowhere to be seen. Only
**Unidos Pode**mos (***
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unidos_Podemos>*https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unidos_Podemos**)
could be heard now-and-then, trying to capitalize on our wounded for its
ow**n ends. Apart this, there were only grassroots people organizing and
acting*, including some members of parliament and councilors who are
people like anyone else. Over 24 hours, civil society came together to
work for a day in which people could vote and vote on a huge scale and,
furthermore, it didn’t fall into the temptation of responding to the
state’s provocation in the form of violence, even though hundreds of
injured people needed medical attention. There was happiness, anger and
fraternity among the most different people. It was incredibly moving.
There were no slogans, no shouting, so that people could vote without
being coerced in *this display of a valiant, stirring capacity for
organization and desire for democracy.*

*On October 1, 2017 we proved that order is the people and disorder is
this state*.


/*Xnet*/



============


More information:
[email protected]

-----

XNET

https://xnet-x.net/en/
https://twitter.com/X_net_
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-----



Frederic Neyrat schrieb:
> Hi,
>
> I found this text interesting:
> ​ "​
> The future of the EU at stake in Catalonia
> ​ "
> http://www.atimes.com/article/future-eu-stake-catalonia/
>
> Quote (amongst other interesting things):
> ​ "​
> The Catalan government beat the fascist goons with two very simple
> codes – as revealed by La Vanguardia. “I’ve got the Tupperware. Where
> do we meet?” was the code on a prepaid mobile phone for people to
> collect and protect ballot boxes. “I’m the paper traveler” was the
> code to protect the actual paper ballots. Julian Assange/WikiLeaks had
> warned about the world’s first Internet war as deployed by Madrid to
> smash the electronic voting system. The counterpunch was – literally –
> on paper. The US National Security Agency must have learned a few
> lessons.​
> ​ "
> ​
> Best,
>
> Frédéric Neyrat​
>
> 2017-10-03 14:40 GMT-07:00 Ian Alan Paul <[email protected]
> <mailto:[email protected]>>:
>
>     The radical Left in Barcelona is conflicted. People oppose
>     independence simply because it has the tendency to subsume all
>     other political antagonisms (see the very strange left/right
>     coalition currently in power in Catalonia). At the same time,
>     there is general agreement about the right to self-determination
>     which is historically very strong in the region, and Rajoy sending
>     in his thugs to repress the referendum certainly has done nothing
>     but bolster the sentiment. This of course is magnified by the
>     well-remembered history of Francoist repression in the region.
>
>     Rajoy's play is the divide the Spanish Left over the question of
>     independence (particularly Podemos), while Catalan Independentists
>     hope for intervention/sanctions from the EU/UN.
>
>     The real history, of course, remains to be settled on the streets.
>     The general strike which is currently unfolding can turn and
>     reroute the present conjuncture in any which way, and no one, even
>     Rajoy, seems to be sure where this is all headed. Let's be
>     attentive and ready to act in solidarity with all of those on the
>     streets when calls to do so inevitably arise.
>
>     ~i
>
>     _____________________________________
>
>     /“//What can I do?/
>     /One must begin somewhere./
>     /Begin what?/
>     /The only thing in the world worth beginning:/
>     /The End of the world of course.”
>     /
>     /
>     /
>     /           -Aimé Césaire/
>
>     On Tue, Oct 3, 2017 at 7:14 AM, Felix Stalder <[email protected]
>     <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>
>         I think this is much more than identity politics, beyond the
>         point that
>         all politics that aim at a certain broad, popular support, are
>         also
>         about identity. That is, they need to address the questions of
>         who are
>         "we" and what directions should "our" collective efforts
>         should take.
>
>         Several outcomes are possible. Catalan independence
>         (irrespective of
>         whether this "nation" will also gets is own "state") could
>         either point
>         beyond the nation state, helping to imagine the new Europe of
>         Regions,
>         as Ulrike Guérot does not tired to advocate, or it could turn
>         into just
>         another enclave protecting its supposedly homogeneous identity.
>
>         There is always a danger of the latter outcome (which, to a
>         certain
>         degree is what happened to Quebec nationalism in the 1990s),
>         but it's
>         not preordained.
>
>         What's the sense of nettimers in Barcelona? If this an
>         opening, or a
>         closure?
>
>         Felix
>
>
>
>
>         On 2017-10-03 08:00, Morlock Elloi wrote:
>         > Isn't this equivalent of identity politics, at the province
>         level?
>         >
>         > Bunch of cute and original provinces, with unique histories,
>         salamis,
>         > Gaudis and animosities, feeling so good being themselves,
>         expressing
>         > their little unique patriotic feelings, and, while doing all
>         that, being
>         > insignificant minions and subordinates, even bitches, of the
>         powers that
>         > have no slightest intention of disintegrating into cute
>         communes, and
>         > failing to join forces (or what's left of them) with other cute
>         > mistresses of the powers that be?
>         >
>         > Isn't it funny that the same entities that support identity
>         politics
>         > support all these little independencies?
>         > #  distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without
>         permission
>         > #  <nettime>  is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
>         > #  collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the
>         nets
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>         <mailto:[email protected]>
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>         Subject:
>         >
>
>         --
>
>          ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| http://felix.openflows.com
>          |OPEN PGP:  https://pgp.mit.edu/pks/lookup?search=0x0C9FF2AC
>         <https://pgp.mit.edu/pks/lookup?search=0x0C9FF2AC>
>
>
>         #  distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
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-- 
 
oliver lerone schultz

:: meet me @
:: linkedIn <https://www.linkedin.com/in/lerone> | academia.edu
<http://independent.academia.edu/oliverleroneschultz> | lerone.info
<http://lerone.info>

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