Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Access Denied or Hatreds Kingdom

Access Denied: The Practice and Policy of Global Internet Filtering

Author: Ronald J Deibert

Many countries around the world block or filter Internet content, denying access to information--often about politics, but also relating to sexuality, culture, or religion--that they deem too sensitive for ordinary citizens. Access Denied documents and analyzes Internet filtering practices in over three dozen countries, offering the first rigorously conducted study of this accelerating trend.

Internet filtering takes place in at least forty states worldwide including many countries in Asia and the Middle East and North Africa. Related Internet content control mechanisms are also in place in Canada, the United States and a cluster of countries in Europe. Drawing on a just-completed survey of global Internet filtering undertaken by the OpenNet Initiative (a collaboration of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School, the Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto, the Oxford Internet Institute at Oxford University, and the University of Cambridge) and relying on work by regional experts and an extensive network of researchers, Access Denied examines the political, legal, social, and cultural contexts of Internet filtering in these states from a variety of perspectives. Chapters discuss the mechanisms and politics of Internet filtering, the strengths and limitations of the technology that powers it, the relevance of international law, ethical considerations for corporations that supply states with the tools for blocking and filtering, and the implications of Internet filtering for activist communities that increasingly rely on Internet technologies for communicating their missions.

Reports on Internet content regulation in fortydifferent countries follow, with each country profile outlining the types of content blocked by category and documenting key findings.

Contributors:

Ross Anderson, Malcolm Birdling, Ronald Deibert, Robert Faris, Vesselina Haralampieva, Steven Murdoch, Helmi Noman, John Palfrey, Rafal Rohozinski, Mary Rundle, Nart Villeneuve, Stephanie Wang, and Jonathan Zittrain



Book review: The Menopause Diet Daily Journal or Freedom from Allergy Cookbook

Hatred's Kingdom: How Saudi Arabia Supports the New Global Terrorism

Author: Dore Gold

Dore Gold, former Israeli Ambassador to the U.N. and internationally known Middle East expert, uses previously unpublished intelligence documents to piece together the links between the current wave of global terrorism-from the World Trade Center to Bali, Indonesia-and the ideology of hatred taught in the schools and mosques of Saudi Arabia.



Table of Contents:
List of Maps
Introduction: The Roots of Terror1
Ch. 1Violent Origins: Reviving Jihad and the War Against the Polytheists17
Ch. 2Countering the Wahhabi Menace31
Ch. 3"White Terror": The Ikhwan and the Rise of the Modern Saudi Kingdom41
Ch. 4Building the Modern Saudi State: Oil, the Palestine Question, and the Americans57
Ch. 5Reactivating Wahhabism73
Ch. 6The Hothouse for Militant Islamic Radicalism89
Ch. 7Wahhabism Reasserts Itself105
Ch. 8Wahhabism's Global Reach125
Ch. 9Countdown to September 11 : The Gulf War and Wahhabism's New Outburst in the 1990s157
Ch. 10The Hatred Continues185
Conclusion: Ending the Hatred213
AppSaudi Support for Terrorism: The Evidence229
Notes253
Glossary285
Acknowledgments289
Index293

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