国产视频

In Short

Internet Realities Watch, vol. 1

Censorship, Disconnection, and Control in Russia, India, Saudi Arabia, Vietnam, Sudan, Congo, Gabon

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Democratic policymakers once envisioned that a global and open internet would be a permanent fixture of our digital world, but that ideal is fading away. The reality is that a sovereign and controlled model for the internet is spreading: content censorship, tight sovereign control of communication infrastructure, pervasive surveillance, and other authoritarian principles are finding their way online. Some countries, like the United States or the United Kingdom, have clearly taken to defending a global and open internet, whereas countries like China, Iran, and Russia have clearly taken to undermining it.

That鈥檚 in part why the 50 nations who have yet to take a clear stance one way or the other are looking to world powers for what to do. In this way, domestic policies鈥攏ot just international practices and agreements鈥攚ill shape the future of the internet, as global powers attempt to influence others to follow in their footsteps. (Such is the case with the .) To better catalogue changing domestic policies on and around the internet, in a wide range of countries both influential and influenced, this will be the first in a series of blog posts tracking the spread of authoritarian internet policies and practices by which governments .

This particular catalogue of events stretches back to mid-December 2018.


Russia: Three federal lawmakers to ban the online publication of materials which 鈥渂latantly disrespect Russian society, the state, official state symbols, the Russian Constitution, and law enforcement agencies.鈥 Internet regulator Roskomnadzor has that would allow it to block search engines that don鈥檛 comply with state censorship requests. A third aims to build out a domestic internet unique to Russia, where the state controls domain name systems and other mechanisms for traffic routing. This is all of Russia鈥檚 larger projection of influence in international norm-setting on cyberspace issues, insofar as its domestic policies hold sway over what is globally acceptable for controlling and censoring the internet within a state鈥檚 borders.

India: The Home Ministry 10 government agencies new authorities to surveil the internet within the country鈥攊ncluding the ability to intercept, monitor, and decrypt information from any computer. India鈥檚 Congress鈥 president has Prime Minister Narendra Modi an 鈥渋nsecure dictator鈥 as the policy receives much criticism.

Saudi Arabia: The government an episode of Netflix鈥檚 Patriot Act with Hasan Minhaj that critiqued the Crown Prince. It the episode violated Saudi cybercrime law.

Vietnam: A cybersecurity law in June by Vietnam鈥檚 National Assembly went into effect on the first day of the new year. It requires social media companies to locally store user data (鈥渄ata localization鈥), to hand over information at a government request, and to delete any offensive or 鈥渢oxic鈥 materials. and the likes of have criticized the law鈥檚 sweeping powers. On January 9th, the Vietnamese government that Facebook violated the law when it reportedly didn鈥檛 respond to page takedown requests.

Sudan: At the end of 2018, the government to social media platforms like Twitter and Facebook amid protests over rising bread prices, rising inflation, and fuel shortages. Numerous people were during these protests, and the shutdown is speculated in part to prevent information about the protests from leaking to the outside world.*

Congo: On January 1, the government in Congo across the country in anticipation of results from a contentious presidential election. Meanwhile, the of the election have of possible backdoor political deals that undermined the legitimacy of the voting process.

Gabon: On January 7, the government internet and broadcasting services after an attempted coup against the Gabonian President. This and the incident in Congo are indicative of a growing problem, by which governments disconnect their domestic internet networks from the global system due to unrest or other political motivations.


In looking at these events, it鈥檚 clear that governments are increasingly using 鈥渃ybercrime鈥 as justification for censoring politically undesirable content. This is not exactly a novel approach鈥攚orld powers like China have practiced a similar approach for the better part of a decade domestically and via in the United Nations. Further, these recent events also underscore how governments who desire sweeping online censorship authority are no longer satisfied with merely asking companies to remove information; they want the ability to entirely block content on their own (e.g., building their own domestic internets, or even disconnecting their domestic networks from the global internet altogether).

Every country is struggling with cybersecurity challenges, and in the face of malicious code flowing across borders, the authoritarian rhetoric of tightly controlling the internet for 鈥渃ybersecurity鈥 purposes can be compelling. So, in addition to tracking policies like those above, democratic policymakers would do well to build a cohesive narrative about managing the internet鈥檚 insecurity while still championing its freedom and openness that bolsters economics, advances knowledge, and increases state power.

*This incident was added on 1/11/19 after initial publication of the blog post.

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Justin Sherman
Justin Sherman
Internet Realities Watch, vol. 1