censorship in india
Good lord. I've just returned from the conference on international citizen journalism -- at which many of the discussions focused on overcoming government and corporate censorship (both explicit and implicit) -- and the news today is uncannily about government censorship of new media. In particular, Indian Internet service providers are blocking access to blogs at the request of the Indian government.
So the story so far is that the government only asked the ISPs to block a handful of sites, but that the ISPs had no way of blocking select blogspot and typepad sites, so they just banned them all.
In response, a group of Indian bloggers have set up a "Bloggers Against Censorship" wiki to collect and share news about the ban (and ways to get around it.)
So, two wrongs and a right:
- Crackdown on freedom of speech (by a country often referred to as the "world's largest democracy.")
- Terrible, half-assed application of technology to filter content.
- Affected group using the Web to organize, draw attention to the issue, and overcome the ban.
I'm curious to know: Why now? Is there any relation to the recent train bombings?