"If President Obama wants to support democratic movements on a shoestring, he should support an "Internet freedom initiative" pending in Congress. This would include $50 million in the appropriations bill for these censorship-evasion technologies. The 21st-century equivalent of the Berlin wall is a cyberbarrier, and we can help puncture it.
Mr. Zhou, the son of a Chinese army general, said that he and his colleagues began to develop such software after the 1999 Chinese government crackdown on Falun Gong (which the authorities denounce as a cult). One result was a free software called Freegate, small enough to carry on a flash drive. It takes a surfer to an overseas server that changes I.P. addresses every second or so, too quickly for a government to block it, and then from there to a banned site.
Freegate amounts to a dissident's cyberkit. E-mails sent with it can be encrypted. And after a session is complete, a press of a button eliminates any sign that it was used on that computer."
Nicholas Kristof @ NYT
Ironic really that while the rest of the world wants to smash the cyber-wall, you want to erect one here in Australia! "Fair shake of the sauce bottle mate."
Or are your freedoms different to mine?
Ironic really that while the rest of the world wants to smash the cyber-wall, you want to erect one here in Australia! "Fair shake of the sauce bottle mate."
Or are your freedoms different to mine?
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