Technology
Nearly 90% of the world’s internet users are being monitored
A new report claims, surprise, social media isn’t really that free. Instead, it’s full of bad faith actors manipulating elections and government officials surveilling users.
The report, 2019 Freedom on the Net, comes from “independent watchdog organization” Freedom House and is titled “The Crisis of Social Media. And after reading the whole thing (PDF), that still feels like it’s underplaying the growing tire fire that is social media.
And while the ongoing efforts to interfere with elections are a huge concern, the breadth of surveillance is just as disturbing. According to the report, 40 of 65 countries it studied (about 62 percent) “have instituted advanced social media surveillance programs.”
In terms of internet freedom, China was ranked as the least free country. Russia and Egypt were also ranked as “not free.” In total, “89 percent of internet users or nearly 3 billion people” fall under some sort of surveillance program, an absolutely staggering number.
And how they’re doing it is just as staggering. For instance, the report notes that in Iran, there’s a “42,000-strong army of volunteers who monitor online speech.” And China’s Communist Party has a similar system of recruits leafing through data and flagging “problematic content.” Meanwhile, Chinese firm Semptian boasts that its Aegis surveillance system helps them monitor over 200 million people in China.
Though the United States is listed as “free” of internet censorship, the report makes clear that the U.S. is hardly innocent. The report mentions Israeli cybersecurity company Cellebrite, who recently agreed to a new deal with ICE valued at between $30-35 million. Cellebrite’s tools enable users to easily hack phones and grab all sorts of data.
And other countries are sending officials to the U.S. to learn how to monitor social media.
The report says that “Philippine officials traveled to North Carolina for training by US Army personnel on developing a new social media monitoring unit.” And Bangladesh’s Rapid Action Battalion (RAB), a government-backed “anti-terrorism” unit that is largely known for massive human rights violations including torture and “extrajudicial killings,” got the OK to travel to the United States in April 2019 to learn how to use “Location Based Social Network Monitoring System Software.”
The study also lays out, crucially, how these governments are leveraging data collected by all this surveillance and —spoiler alert— it’s not good! According to the report, “47 of the 65 countries assessed featured arrests of users for political, social, or religious speech.”
And, again, it’s not just repressive regimes that are doing this. Even “free” countries like the UK and U.S. surveilled activists, including an instance in which ICE used “social media in New York City to gather information on groups protesting the administration’s immigration and gun-control policies.”
The report is dense but very much worth a read to better understand just how widespread these practices are. Just don’t expect to feel very good about internet freedom when you’re done.
-
Entertainment7 days ago
WordPress.org’s login page demands you pledge loyalty to pineapple pizza
-
Entertainment6 days ago
‘Mufasa: The Lion King’ review: Can Barry Jenkins break the Disney machine?
-
Entertainment6 days ago
OpenAI’s plan to make ChatGPT the ‘everything app’ has never been more clear
-
Entertainment5 days ago
‘The Last Showgirl’ review: Pamela Anderson leads a shattering ensemble as an aging burlesque entertainer
-
Entertainment6 days ago
How to watch NFL Christmas Gameday and Beyoncé halftime
-
Entertainment4 days ago
Polyamorous influencer breakups: What happens when hypervisible relationships end
-
Entertainment4 days ago
‘The Room Next Door’ review: Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore are magnificent
-
Entertainment3 days ago
CES 2025 preview: What to expect