Using data from the Global Integrity Index,
we put a U.S. court's recent order to block access to anti-corruption
site Wikileaks.org into context. In summary: The Wikileaks.org shutdown
is unheard of in the West, and has only been seen in a handful of the
most repressive regimes. Good thing it doesn't work very well.
Starting in 2007, Global Integrity added specific questions about Internet censorship to the Integrity Indicators, which are a set of 304 questions
addressing the practice of anti-corruption in national governments. We
have always held that a free and critical media is an essential
component of good governance; adding an analysis of Internet censorship
was an overdue refinement.
We asked our local research teams to investigate two questions:
The
results of this work are generally encouraging. In examining a diverse
group of 50 countries, a majority earn a full score on both counts.
Freedom of speech is a widely held right. Moreover, Internet censorship
is difficult and is often ineffective in suppressing political
activity. Most governments, aside from targeted libel restrictions,
don't bother regulating online political speech at all.
The Many Flavors of Internet Censorship
A
few countries, however, are deeply committed to trying to make
censorship work. On this list in 2007 are Algeria, China, Egypt,
Kazakhstan, Russia and Thailand. Each has it's own flavor to the
repression of online speech -- Internet censorship is still in an
experimentation phase, and even the most aggressive approaches don't
seem to work very well.
So how does the United States fit into this picture?
The court order that muzzled Wikileaks.org (covered here)
was prompted not by the government but by a bank registered in the
Cayman Islands. The bank used American courts and a compliant domain
registrar to scrub the wikileaks.org URL from the Internet. It is
extremely unlikely that this decision will stand up in an appeals
court, but the larger point is that there is no reason this case should
even be fought. Wikileaks should not need a legal team to explain to
the courts that the First Amendment requires freedom of speech.
The
whole event seems to encapsulate the constant criticism of governance
in the United States: that the government has been captured by
corporate interests, and that the world-leading rule of law and technocratic mechanisms in place can be hijacked to serve as tools for narrow, wealthy interests.
Online Censorship: Sounds good, but it never works.
While
there is much diversity in the style of Internet censorship among the
world's worst offenders, one common thread unites them: Internet
censorship doesn't work. Cut off one site, and a thousand more pop up.
In China, censorship online is sparking criticism that off-line censorship has rarely seen.
So
Wikileaks.org went offline, but Wikileaks mirror sites hosted overseas
hold the same content, and the original site is still up and running
from Sweden (http://88.80.13.160)
without its easier-to-type URL. As it turns out, shutting down
Wikileaks-the-website has focused our attention on Wikileaks-the-idea,
which is spreading at the speed of light.
UPDATE: for more reading on anti-corruption, governance and censorship, try the Global Integrity Report. For more on online censorship, try the Electronic Frontier Foundation or the Open Net Initiative.
-- Jonathan Werve
Internet Censorship: A Comparative Study
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- Category: Internet Censorship