Blog, Internet & politiek

Japans bedrijf nalatig in melden cyberaanval

Nederland is niet het enige land waar bedrijven in dienst van de overheid soms nalatig zijn met het melden van beveiligingsproblemen. Persbureau Reuters meldt vandaag dat wapenleverancier Mitsubishi Heavy Industries volgens de Japanse regering veel eerder melding moeten maken van een cyberaanval.

Doorgaan met lezen “Japans bedrijf nalatig in melden cyberaanval”

Censuur en controle, Internet & politiek, Nieuws

Sarkozy over déclaration d’indépendance du cyberspace: Je ne crois pas.

De Franse president Nicolas Sarkozy wil strengere regels voor het internet, heeft hij vanochtend in een toespraak gezegd tijdens het E-G8 Forum, een tweedaagse bijeenkomst over het internet. Het forum moet uitmonden in een advies aan de echte G8 later deze week.

Sarkozy kon zich direct schrap zetten voor reacties, want veel van de aanwezigen uit de internetwereld (onder andere Google-topman Eric Schmidt is er) zullen het niet met hem eens zijn. Vooral John Perry Barlow niet, de auteur van de onafhankelijkheidsverklaring van het internet. Hoewel die al weer vijftien jaar oud is, geniet deze nog een soort van cult-status onder internet-vrijheidsstrijders.

Opvallend was dat Sarkozy, president van het land dat ons de Verklaring van de Rechten van de Mens en de Burger uit 1789, rechtstreeks leek te verwijzen naar die internetverklaring uit 1996. Doorgaan met lezen “Sarkozy over déclaration d’indépendance du cyberspace: Je ne crois pas.”

Internet & politiek, Nieuws

Wikipedia wil op Werelderfgoedlijst

Kan een website cultureel erfgoed zijn? De UNESCO mag daar binnenkort een eerste oordeel over vellen. De door vrijwilligers geschreven encyclopedie Wikipedia wil graag op de Werelderfgoedlijst komen.

Op de Werelderfgoedlijst staan momenteel 911 ‘dingen’, van de Australische Great Barrier Reef tot Zimbabwe’s ruïnes. Nederland is met negen stuks (molens, echt waar?) aardig vertegenwoordigd. Websites staan nog niet op de Werelderfgoedlijst (andersom wel) en de kans lijkt niet zo groot dat het Wikipedia gaat lukken.

Wikipedia-opperhoofd Jimmy Wales zegt in de New York Times: Doorgaan met lezen “Wikipedia wil op Werelderfgoedlijst”

Internet & politiek, Overige

Tweede Cyber Centrum aangekondigd

Het eerste is nog niet opgezet of er is al een tweede aangekondigd. Nadat in februari in de Nationale Cyber Security Strategie werd bekendgemaakt dat er een Nationaal Cyber Security Centrum gaat komen om ons tegen cyberaanvallen te  beschermen, maakt minister Hillen (Defensie, CDA’er) vandaag bekend dat er een Defensie CyberExpertise Centrum komt. Uit de brief van Hillen aan de Tweede Kamer:

Dit cyberexpertisecentrum is nadrukkelijk gericht op de kennisuitwisseling tussen het civiele en het militaire domein en zal nauw samenwerken met het eveneens in oprichting zijnde National Cyber Security Centrum. Uit militair oogpunt bestaat tevens behoefte aan meer inzicht in cyber operations, zowel als onderdeel van offensieve operaties als bij wijze van reactie op een aanval.

Nu maar hopen dat die twee Cyber Centra inderdaad een beetje goed met elkaar gaan samenwerken.

Internet & politiek, Netneutraliteit, Nieuws

Tweede Kamer wil netneutraliteit in wet vastgelegd

In de Tweede Kamer heeft vandaag een meerderheid geëist dat het kabinet netneutraliteit verankert in de wet. Afknijpen van concurrerende diensten zou dan verboden worden. De regering vindt het echter genoeg om alleen te verplichten dat providers transparant zijn. Oftewel: afknijpen mag, mits je provider dat maar meldt.

Vanmiddag vergaderde de Tweede Kamer over netneutraliteit, het principe dat een internetprovider geen diensten blokkeert, voorrang geeft of afknijpt. Waarom zou een provider dat doen? Bijvoorbeeld omdat hij wil dat een internetter sneller toegang krijgt tot een dochterbedrijf dan tot diens concurrent. Bekijk hieronder het filmpje en je weet in twee minuten precies hoe het zit met netneutraliteit.

Doorgaan met lezen “Tweede Kamer wil netneutraliteit in wet vastgelegd”

in English, Internet & politiek, Profiel

Who is Evgeny Morozov?

By Peter Teffer

During any debate on the relevance of social media in revolutions someone will mention his name. Evgeny Morozov’s book The Net Delusion: How Not to Liberate The World (in the US: The Dark Side of Internet Freedom) has caused a stir in the world of internet scholars. Although he is only 27, Morozov’s has become an important voice in the debate on the revolutionary characteristics of the Internet, which was given a boost by the use of Facebook during the Tunisian and Egyptian uprisings.

In the book Morozov criticizes the ‘cyber utopians’ who claim that social media carry an intrinsic revolutionary aspect. He points out that authoritarian regimes are just as well able to use the internet, which is in fact a double-edged sword. After Iran’s so-called Twitter revolution in 2009 the government was able to arrest activists because they were all easily recognized from YouTube footage. Morozov’s critics think he has made a caricature of the cyber utopians. Some, like The New York Times’s Roger Cohen, ridiculed the timing of his book, January, “hitting stores just as the Facebook-armed youth of Tunisia and Egypt rise to demonstrate the liberating power of social media”. Morozov however by no means wrote that social media will never facilitate uprisings, just that dictators can use the tools just as well. Nevertheless Morozov seems to enjoy watching his critics “trip over one another in an effort to put another nail in the coffin of cyber-realism”, he recently wrote in the Guardian.

Who is this Belarusian young man, whose articles were published in The Economist, The Washington Post, Foreign Policy, Financial  Times, and many more media.

Evgeny Morozov grew up in the mining town of Salihorsk, approximately 88 miles [140 kilometers] south of the Belarusian capital of Minsk. The city is just over fifty years old and has large amounts of potassium. Morozov’s parents moved from Russia to the, what Morozov calls a “relatively prosperous town”. Nevertheless chances for a young boy like Evgeny were small and when he got the chance to leave the authoritarian led country at 17, it was no surprise he did.

Supported financially by philanthropist George Soros’s Open  Society Foundations, Morozov moved to Bulgaria in 2001 to study there at the American University in Bulgaria (AUBG). According to his former teacher Aernout van  Lynden, he quickly turned out to be a disciplined and intelligent young man. “Evgeny is a fighter and a hard worker.” Although Morozov was officially studying business and marketing, he was also interested in taking journalism classes. Mr Van Lynden is a British-Dutch former war correspondent who at the time taught communication and journalism at the AUBG. Van Lynden remembers well how Morozov asked him for a 500 dollar donation*. “He wanted to travel to a conference, but didn’t have the money. Evgeny wanted to see and travel as much as possible, and wanted to build an a large network”, Van Lynden says in a conversation in The Hague. He was pleasantly surprised to find Morozov dedicating the book The Net Delusion to him. Van Lynden, Morozov writes, inspired him to write.

In 2005 Morozov moved to Berlin, where he studied a one year course at the European College of Liberal Arts  (ECLA). Here too the Belarusian-born student took every opportunity to travel. In April of 2006 he was one of four ECLA-students to travel to Beijing, to attend the Harvard World Model United Nations.

By the time Morozov had already gotten involved with the nonprofit organization Transitions Online (TOL). This Prague based NGO trains journalists in Eastern Europe en Central Asia, and publishes an internet magazine. Morozov wanted to contribute to a blog TOL was publishing about his native country Belarus, which held presidential elections in March 2006 that were followed by protests. When Morozov sent in his blogs, TOL’s executive director Jeremy Druker was impressed. Druker, an American, calls his written English “amazing”. Morozov never lost his thick Russian accent, but his writings disguise his origins. For TOL Morozov held trainings on new media and worked as a blog coordinator. Druker says by phone from Prague that Morozov was “a high maintenance guy, not your average employee”. According to Morozov’s former boss he was constantly wanting to go further than possible. “But his youthful impatience was tolerable because he is so smart. He’s one of the most brilliant people I met here”, says Druker, who came to post-communist Europe from the US about twenty years ago.

His intelligence wasn’t lost on others too. Journalist Robert Cottrell is a member of TOL’s advisory board and met Morozov in New York in 2006. At the time Cottrell was deputy editor of The Economist’s website. Cottrell writes by email: “Evgeny was visiting New York, and I welcomed him into the office for a cup of tea and a talk. It was immediately apparent that he understood social media, and information in general, ten or twenty times better than I did. So my first thought was “how can I get this man to write for us?””

Early 2008 Morozov left Transitions Online, partly because he had become skeptical of what NGO’s can accomplish. Later that year he moved to New York to start his academic career as a fellow at the Open Society Institute. In September 2009 he got accepted at the Georgetown University in Washington D.C., where he became a Yahoo fellow at the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy. The Institute’s director says Morozov “absolutely” delivered. “He published a gazillion articles and he was on the radio every week”, Newberg says by phone. Morozov finished his first draft of The Net Delusion while still being a fellow, which Newberg says was enormously ambitious.

Ambitious, intelligent, hardworking. Evgeny Morozov, born in 1984, is not someone for smalltalk. When Monique Doppert, a Dutch programme officer at NGO Hivos, shared a train ride through the Netherlands from Amsterdam to Maastricht, Morozov spent the entire 2 hours and 26 minutes giving Doppert what she calls a lecture on the dark side of the internet. His former teacher Van Lynden describes Morozov as someone who works seven days a week.

Morozov himself admits being a workaholic. “Right now I’m working on six different book reviews, which is probably twice as much as the norm”, Morozov tells me in a Skype conversation. At the Stanford University in California, where he’s been working since September, Morozov is working harder than if he had become a banker. But he is okay with that, because “intellectually it’s very gratifying”, he says.

The 27-year-old doesn’t have much of a social life in Palo Alto, where he lives. “It’s a pretty isolated place. I have friends in San Francisco, but I don’t drive.” Most of his friends live elsewhere in the world, which is part of the reason he enjoys travelling. “Usually I try to spend six weeks in the library, and then hit the road for six weeks.” When I talk to him, he is Skyping from Berlin. That week he will tweet “Crossed the Atlantic third time in a week…Joy!”

Yet soon Morozov will have to settle down for a longer period again. He recently sold his second book, which will be a sequel to The Net Delusion. “My first book looked at the impact of the internet in authoritarian states. I want to look at those same themes in liberal democracies.”

* Update: Morozov let me know that in the case of Aernout van Lynden, Morozov had first asked Van Lynden to ask his wife at the embassy (“which made sense because I was going to a conference in NL”, Morozov wrote) for 300 euros. “She said no and Aernout gave me his own money.”

Achtergrond, Censuur en controle, Internet & politiek

Het (gevaarlijke) internet volgens Evgeny Morozov

Het debat over de donkere kanten van internet, gisteren op de Avond van de Persvrijheid in Amsterdam, was nog maar net begonnen of zijn naam viel al: Evgeny Morozov. Zijn internetkritische boek The Net Delusion is verplichte kost voor wie iets zinnigs wil zeggen over de revolutionaire kracht van sociale media. Volgens Morozov heeft het internet niet alleen bevrijdende krachten, maar biedt het autoritaire regimes ook de mogelijkheid kritiek te smoren en dissidenten op te sporen.

Doorgaan met lezen “Het (gevaarlijke) internet volgens Evgeny Morozov”