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Difference between revisions of "Anarchopedia:Article in the news"

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''' Too new ''' <br>(Much of this story is just breaking. News and of course, links to get you to the pros)
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<center><!--''' Too new ''' <br>(Much of this story is just breaking. News and of course, links to get you to the pros) -->
 
[[File:Switch off internet in case of political dissent.jpg|thumb|250px|Satirical graphic made in reaction to the internet blackout in Egypt]]
 
[[File:Switch off internet in case of political dissent.jpg|thumb|250px|Satirical graphic made in reaction to the internet blackout in Egypt]]
<center>[[2011 Egyptian media censorship]]<br>
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= [[2011 Egyptian media censorship]] =
 
On January 25 and 26, 2011, [[Wikipedia:Twitter]] was blocked in [[Egypt]] due to the [[2011 Egyptian protests]] ([[Wikipedia:2011 Egyptian protests|WP]]),<ref name="twitter">[http://techcrunch.com/2011/01/25/twitter-blocked-egypt/ TechCrunch: Twitter blocked in Egypt]</ref> and [[Facebook]] was later blocked as well.<ref name="WSJ_FB_Egypt">[http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20110128-706943.html Wall Street Journal, Egypt Communications Cut Ahead Of Further Protests]</ref>
 
On January 25 and 26, 2011, [[Wikipedia:Twitter]] was blocked in [[Egypt]] due to the [[2011 Egyptian protests]] ([[Wikipedia:2011 Egyptian protests|WP]]),<ref name="twitter">[http://techcrunch.com/2011/01/25/twitter-blocked-egypt/ TechCrunch: Twitter blocked in Egypt]</ref> and [[Facebook]] was later blocked as well.<ref name="WSJ_FB_Egypt">[http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20110128-706943.html Wall Street Journal, Egypt Communications Cut Ahead Of Further Protests]</ref>
  
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The [[Hacktivism]] group [[Anonymous]] displayed the altruistic side of direct action for the uninitiated, with techniques used in the 1989 Beijing protests, to update Egyptians behind the information 'Iron Curtain' as [[Andy Greenberg]] dubbed it;<ref name=TF>[http://blogs.forbes.com/andygreenberg/2011/01/28/amid-digital-blackout-anonymous-mass-faxes-wikileaks-cables-to-egypt/ Security1871Share13diggsdigg73inShareAmid Digital Blackout, Anonymous Mass-Faxes WikiLeaks Cables To Egypt] 28 Jan '11, Andy Greenberg, The Firewall</ref> Egypt's loss of internet access had kept them from news about WikiLeaks-intercepted Egyptian diplomatic cables, but Anonymous ducked under the obstruction with a low-tech solution: Faxes.<ref name=TF/>
 
The [[Hacktivism]] group [[Anonymous]] displayed the altruistic side of direct action for the uninitiated, with techniques used in the 1989 Beijing protests, to update Egyptians behind the information 'Iron Curtain' as [[Andy Greenberg]] dubbed it;<ref name=TF>[http://blogs.forbes.com/andygreenberg/2011/01/28/amid-digital-blackout-anonymous-mass-faxes-wikileaks-cables-to-egypt/ Security1871Share13diggsdigg73inShareAmid Digital Blackout, Anonymous Mass-Faxes WikiLeaks Cables To Egypt] 28 Jan '11, Andy Greenberg, The Firewall</ref> Egypt's loss of internet access had kept them from news about WikiLeaks-intercepted Egyptian diplomatic cables, but Anonymous ducked under the obstruction with a low-tech solution: Faxes.<ref name=TF/>
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= [[Coalition to Save the Preserves]] =
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'''Coalition to Save the Preserves''' was a name chosen in 2002 by Mark Sands to cover up his arson of a building that he did not want in his area by portraying it as [[Propaganda of the deed]] (or more specifically, 'eco-terrorism').<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/12/us/trumped-up-eco-terrorism-an-arsonist-s-tale.html Trumped-Up Eco-Terrorism: An Arsonist's Tale] JAMES HIBBERD, New York Times, 12 February, 2002</ref>
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The fact that Sands had been perpetrating a hoax, however dangerous a hoax, never seemed to fully sink into the minds of some US. security agency employees, and most likely others decided it would be expedient to ignore this fact, and they have issued numerous lists of terrorists with the CtStP included:
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* In 2006, the Department of Homeland Security issued a threat assessment that included the CtStP as one of the threats on US soil that had carried out domestic terrorism.<ref>[http://kucampus.kaplan.edu/documentstore/docs09/pdf/picj/vol2/issue1/A_Homeland_Security_Model_for_Assessing_US_Domestic_Threats.pdf A Homeland Security Model for Assessing US Domestic Threats] Shawn Cupp and Michael G. Spight, PDF</ref>
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* Listing on the [[Wikipedia:Global Terrorism Database|Global Terrorism Database]] by START [[Wikipedia:National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism]], a Center of Excellence of the US Department of Homeland Security based at the University of Maryland<ref>[http://www.start.umd.edu/start/data_collections/tops/terrorist_organization_profile.asp?id=3976  Coalition to Save the Preserves (CSP) Terrorist Organization Profile], [[National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism]]</ref>
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Understandably, Sands' [[Not In My Back Yard]] (NIMBY) activity was something of a threat to real [[direct action]] advocates, and [[Earth First!]], with considerably fewer resources than the FBI or the later security agencies, was at the time, at pains to point out that it was not responsible for his activity<ref>[http://www.earthfirstjournal.org/article.php?id=69 Earth First! Journal]</ref>
  
 
[[Anarchopedia:Article in the news archive]]
 
[[Anarchopedia:Article in the news archive]]

Revision as of 23:19, 5 February 2011

File:Switch off internet in case of political dissent.jpg
Satirical graphic made in reaction to the internet blackout in Egypt

2011 Egyptian media censorship

On January 25 and 26, 2011, Wikipedia:Twitter was blocked in Egypt due to the 2011 Egyptian protests (WP),[1] and Facebook was later blocked as well.[2]

On January 27, various reports claimed that access to the Internet in the entire country had been shut down.[3] The authorities responsible achieved this by shutting down the country's official Domain Name System, in an attempt to stop mobilisation for anti-government protests.[4] Later reports stated that almost all Wikipedia:BGP announcements out of the country had been withdrawn, almost completely disconnecting the country from the global Internet, with only a single major provider, Wikipedia:Noor Data Networks, remaining up.[5][6][7]

The Hacktivism group Anonymous displayed the altruistic side of direct action for the uninitiated, with techniques used in the 1989 Beijing protests, to update Egyptians behind the information 'Iron Curtain' as Andy Greenberg dubbed it;[8] Egypt's loss of internet access had kept them from news about WikiLeaks-intercepted Egyptian diplomatic cables, but Anonymous ducked under the obstruction with a low-tech solution: Faxes.[8]

Coalition to Save the Preserves

Coalition to Save the Preserves was a name chosen in 2002 by Mark Sands to cover up his arson of a building that he did not want in his area by portraying it as Propaganda of the deed (or more specifically, 'eco-terrorism').[9]

The fact that Sands had been perpetrating a hoax, however dangerous a hoax, never seemed to fully sink into the minds of some US. security agency employees, and most likely others decided it would be expedient to ignore this fact, and they have issued numerous lists of terrorists with the CtStP included:

Understandably, Sands' Not In My Back Yard (NIMBY) activity was something of a threat to real direct action advocates, and Earth First!, with considerably fewer resources than the FBI or the later security agencies, was at the time, at pains to point out that it was not responsible for his activity[12]

Anarchopedia:Article in the news archive

Citations