Internet Censorship: A Comparative Study

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United States

Internet Censorship: A Comparative Study

Jonathan Eyler-Werve
Global Integrity Commons (02/19/2008)
Werve is Director of Operations for Global Integrity, an independent monitor of corruption and govenance issues, including media freedoms, access to justice and political participation. Originally educated in political theory, Werve has worked as a journalist in Southeast Asia and Europe, covering grassroots responses to globalization.
This blog post examines Article 19's media freedoms in an emerging space: the Web and peer-to-peer communications. The report provides context, via is a comparative examination of online censorship worldwide, to the unprecedented shutdown of whistle-blowing portal Wikileaks.org by a United States court order. Posted before most media outlets had covered the Wikileaks story at all, my report quickly went viral. As word of the shutdown spread, the report was passed around by technology professionals and activists alike. It was linked by dozens of blogs, drawing thousands of hits within 24 hours and contributing early momentum to a highly critical media frenzy. In less than a week, the original judge reversed his decision to muzzle Wikileaks.org following a 90-minute court proceeding.
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