Iranian internet in 'coma' as presidential election looms - and 13 other Internet freedom stories

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 LogoAccess Express | 05/23/13

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Iranian internet in 'coma' as presidential election looms

Iran is tightening control of the internet ahead of next month's presidential election, mindful of violent street protests that social networkers inspired following allegations of electoral fraud in 2009.

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Fresh evidence of TeliaSonera ties To Uzbek dictatorship

Documents leaked to Swedish investigative journalists offer fresh evidence of a link between Swedish telco TeliaSonera and Gulnara Karimova, the daughter of the president of Uzbekistan.

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Think Skype messages get end-to-end encryption? Think again

In an independent investigation, Ars Technica found that Microsoft not only has ability to peer at the plaintext sent from one Skype user to another, but that the company regularly flexes that monitoring muscle.

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Google, Microsoft and Yahoo: backers behind European Privacy Association

After an independent watchdog accused the European Privacy Association (EPA) of being insufficiently transparent, the group has confirmed that Google, Microsoft and Yahoo are its primary backers.

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Facebook joins GNI amid moves to improve privacy and expression impacts

Facebook will join the Global Network Initiative (GNI), bolstering the group’s roster of some of the biggest firms in communications technology.

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Chinese hackers who breached Google gained access to sensitive data, U.S. officials say

Chinese hackers who breached Google’s servers several years ago gained access to a sensitive database with years’ worth of information about U.S. surveillance targets, according to current and former government officials.

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Hunting for Syrian hackers’ chain of command

It’s the question of the moment inside the murky realm of cybersecurity: Just who — or what — is the Syrian Electronic Army?

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Reporters threatened with CFAA lawsuit for Googling confidential data

In yet another example of the flaws in the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA), two government contractors who left non-password protected confidential information on the open web are threatening to sue the Scripps reporters who discovered it.

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US teenager charged with terrorism for Facebook post

A US high school student has been charged with making terrorist threats for posting rap lyrics he'd written on his Facebook page.

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Telcos risk complicity in surveillance and censorship in Burma

International telcos risk being linked to human rights abuses if they enter the Burmese market before adequate protections are in place, Human Rights Watch said in a new report.

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Facebook’s role in democratization of Azerbaijan

Research shows that beginning this year, social networks, especially Facebook, have influenced communication among different groups of people, including officials in Azerbaijan.

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Saudi telco accused of working with government to spy on citizens

TechPresident gives more context to Moxie Marlinspike's refusal to work with the telco Mobily to develop surveillance software for Saudi Arabia.

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Taiwan to block 'piracy' torrent websites

Taiwan officials stated that they will amend the Copyright Act in order to block foreign web sites that engage in "flagrant copyright violation" including many BitTorrent and FTP sites.

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Cuba comes online following completion of underseas cable from Jamaica

A new branch of the Venezuela-to-Cuba undersea fiber-optic cable has reportedly come online, linking the island to nearby Jamaica, and increasing Cuba's communications bandwidth.

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