Hello,
We published a report documenting recent censorship events in Belarus
amid ongoing protests.
Our report is available here:
https://ooni.org/post/2020-belarus-internet-outages-website-censorship/
We prepared this report in collaboration with folks from Human Constanta
and the Digital Observers Community Belarus.
At least 86 websites appear to have been blocked in Belarus over the
last month, according to OONI network measurement data. These include
news media, political opposition, pro-democracy, and election related
websites, as well as communication and circumvention tool sites.
We observe a variance in blocking both in terms of which websites are
blocked across ISPs (i.e. different sites blocked on different
networks), as well as in terms of censorship techniques.
In some cases, when sites are hosted on HTTP, we see that ISPs serve a
blockpage. But when sites are hosted on encrypted HTTPS, we observe
interference during the TLS handshake (after the TCP connection and
before the HTTP request), resulting in a connection reset error.
As blocking appears to be implemented during the TLS handshake, this
suggests that Deep Packet Inspection (DPI) technology is likely being
used. It seems likely that the SNI is being used to decide whether to
block or let connections go through.
These findings are limited to our analysis of OONI measurements
collected from multiple ISP networks in Belarus between 1st August 2020
to 3rd September 2020, and exclude websites which received limited
testing coverage during this period.
Further details are available in our report, where we also share our
analysis and relevant OONI measurements.
This study can be expanded upon through the use of OONI Probe
(https://ooni.org/install/) and OONI data (https://ooni.org/data/).
We thank all OONI Probe users in Belarus who made this study possible.
Please help share our research:
https://twitter.com/OpenObservatory/status/1306210370516910082
Thanks,
Maria.
--
Maria Xynou
Research & Partnerships Director
Open Observatory of Network Interference (OONI)
https://ooni.org/
PGP Key Fingerprint: 2DC8 AFB6 CA11 B552 1081 FBDE 2131 B3BE 70CA 417E
Hello,
TICS has a new call for papers that may be of interest to some of you.
Please feel free to share widely. Thank you!
Online version: https://tics.site/cfp/
# TICS 2020
**Co-located with the [2020 IEEE/WIC/ACM International Joint Conference on Web
Intelligence and Intelligent Agent Technology (WI-IAT
2020)](http://wi2020.vcrab.com.au/), to be held online.**
## Introduction
Over the past years there has been a greater demand from large-scale players
such as governments and dominant media companies for online censorship and
surveillance, as an understandable reaction against hate speech, copyright
violations, and other cases related to citizen compliance with civil laws and
regulations by national authorities. Unfortunately, this is often accompanied by
a tendency of extensively censoring online content and massively spying on
citizens actions.
Numerous whistle-blower revelations, leaks from classified documents, and a vast
amount of information released by activists, researchers and journalists, reveal
evidence of government-sponsored infrastructure that either goes beyond the
requirements and scope of the law, or operates without any effective regulations
in place. In addition, this infrastructure often supports the interests of big
private corporations, such as the companies that enforce online copyright
control.
Mobile networks are particularly vulnerable to the above points. Due to the
nature of their deployment, few actors can achieve far-reaching results, and
end-users are left unprotected; we are interested in tracking developments that,
without sacrificing functionality and convenience, allow end-users to get
control on the amount and breadth of information generated, stored and processed
on them.
TICS is a special track the area of Internet censorship, surveillance and other
adversarial burdens to technology that bring in danger; to a greater extend the
safety (physical security and privacy) of its users. Proposals for TICS 2020
should be situated within the field of Internet censorship, network
measurements, information controls, surveillance and content moderation.
## Workshop topics
The goal of TICS is to raise awareness around the implications of network
interference, by inviting researchers from complementary disciplines to consider
the effect of their own domain on online censorship and surveillance. Along
those lines, we invite submissions that address the following topics:
* Research on technologies and policies that build upon advancements on the
field of web intelligence to imply blocking, limitation or distortion of the
availability of network services and online content
* The application of web intelligence concepts such as behavioral modeling, data
mining, and social network analytics to target groups and individuals by law
enforcement agencies and private corporations
* The implications of algorithmic and AI-assisted user content classification
(such as for identification of hate-speech, copyright, or disinformation)
* Novel techniques that leverage web intelligence to defend netizens against
censorship and surveillance, or privacy enhancements to the existing AI
infrastructure to mitigate these threats
* Measurement methodologies that detect network interference or content
moderation based on crowd knowledge or web analytics
* The socio-economic consequences and implementation limitations and fallacies
of upload filters and recommendation systems
* Business models and amendments to legal frameworks which promote the use of
web intelligence in ways that build a pluralistic, private, and human-centric
experience without violating user freedoms
* Privacy on mobile networks
* Network measurements
* Radio frequency communications
* Data leaks
* Surveillance
* Backdoors into carrier equipment (base stations, antennas, switches, software)
* Law enforcement
* Telcos security and advance persistent threats
* Network espionage and nation state threats (e.g. "operation Soft Cell")
* Middleboxes / DPI
* Content regulation
* Wiretapping
* Net neutrality
* Data retention
* GDPR
* Device/radio blocking (Network IMEI)
* Ownership of infrastructure, and community-operated networks
* Spectrum sharing
* License-exempt spectrum
## Important dates
* Paper Submission due: September 15th, 2020
* Notification to authors: October 15th, 2020
* Final, camera ready papers, due: November 15th, 2020
* Workshop date: December 14th, 2020
## Paper Submission
**[Paper Submission
Page](https://wi-lab.com/cyberchair/2020/wi20/scripts/submit.php?subarea=S0…
Submitted papers should be limited to a maximum of 8 pages in the standard ACM
2-column format.\
The ACM Proceedings Manuscript Formatting Guidelines can be
found at: <https://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template>
## Committees
### Program Chairs
* Vasilis Ververis, Humboldt University Berlin, vasilis(a)tics.site
* Marios Isaakidis, University College London, marios(a)tics.site
* Gunnar Wolf, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, gwolf(a)tics.site
You can contact all of the chairs by addressing your mail to:
<chairs(a)tics.site>
### Program Committee
* Chrystalenni Loizidou, University of Nicosia
* Keith McManamen, Psiphon
* Will Scott, University of Michigan
## Past Workshops
- [2019 (Valencia, Spain)](https://tics.site/2019)
Best regards,
~Vasilis
--
PGP Fingerprint: 8FD5 CF5F 39FC 03EB B382 7470 5FBF 70B1 D126 0162
PGP Public Key:
https://keys.openpgp.org/vks/v1/by-fingerprint/8FD5CF5F39FC03EBB38274705FBF…
Hi folks!
OONI will be co-facilitating a 6-week training on internet shutdown
measurement for human rights advocates in sub-Saharan Africa.
The deadline to apply is 21st September 2020.
Details are included in the forwarded email below.
Please apply, and share with your networks!
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [KeepItOn] Call for Applications: Internet Shutdown
Measurements for Activists
Date: Tue, 1 Sep 2020 16:07:29 +0000
From: Laura Schwartz-Henderson (lhenderson(a)INTERNEWS.ORG)
<lhenderson(a)INTERNEWS.ORG>
Reply-To: Laura Schwartz-Henderson (lhenderson(a)INTERNEWS.ORG)
<lhenderson(a)INTERNEWS.ORG>
To: keepiton(a)lists.riseup.net <keepiton(a)lists.riseup.net>
Hello Keepiton list! We’re excited to announce an open call for
participants for our Internet Shutdown Measurements for Advocates
program, a 6-week hands-on training program on Open Source network
measurement tools. Please forward the call to your networks and
encourage people from within your own organizations to apply!
* *
*Call for Applications: Internet Shutdown Measurements for Advocates*: A
6-Week Training on Open Source Network Measurement Tools and How to Use
Them, for Advocates in Sub-Saharan Africa**
October 12 - November 13
Internews is excited to announce an open call for participants for our
*Internet Shutdown Measurements for Advocates* training. Through this
6-week hands-on training, participants from Sub-Saharan Africa, will
learn how to collect and analyze internet measurements using a variety
of open source tools and apply these skills to strengthen advocacy
efforts against internet shutdowns.
*About the Training*
This course is intended to provide an introduction on how to use open
source internet measurement tools and datasets for human rights
advocates in Sub-Saharan Africa who are working on initiatives to end or
prevent internet shutdowns in their countries. Through the training,
participants will practice using several open source measurement tools
and datasets, learn how to collect and analyze their own data, reflect
on examples of how advocates have used measurement data to document
shutdowns, and get one-on-one time with trainers to build research plans
and incorporate measurement and documentation into their advocacy.
Applicants will be asked to propose a research question about internet
shutdowns/disruptions that they believe can be answered using network
measurement tools and methods. Throughout the course, as they are
introduced to different open source measurement tools and techniques,
they will work with the trainers to build their projects.
Training sessions will include:
* Introduction to Network Measurement
* Documenting Blackouts
* Detecting Blocking of Websites and Applications
* Measuring Internet Performance using open data
* Contextualizing Your Data: Using Local Insight and Qualitative Research
* Using Measurements in Advocacy
This training is made possible through partnerships between Internews
and the Open Observatory of Network Interference (OONI), Measurement
Lab, the Internet Outage and Detection Analysis Project (CAIDA), Access
Now and others.
*Who Should Apply? *
Internews is seeking applications from individuals or groups from
Sub-Saharan Africa who are currently working on advocacy or research
initiatives focused on internet shutdowns, throttling, or blocking, and
who want to learn more about open source tools that they can use to
measure internet disruptions.
Groups of two individuals may apply together, proposing a collaborative
research or advocacy project. Participants do not need to have a
technical background nor a research background to apply, but some
experience with network measurement, data analysis, or other research
skills is a plus. Those working on projects examining how internet
disruptions impact women or marginalized populations are especially
encouraged to apply.
If offered a position within the training, individuals are expected to
be able to devote at least 5 hours a week throughout the program to
reading/watching materials, participating in a weekly hour-long webinar,
collaborating with mentors and other participants, and building out
their research project. Participants must have reasonably reliable
access to the internet (barring network disruptions) and will be
eligible to receive a small stipend to help cover associated internet
costs.
*Application Instructions*
Applications will be considered on a rolling basis until *Monday,
September 21*. We encourage applicants to apply early, as space is limited.
To apply, please fill out the application at
https://forms.gle/HYgxUFqtrGZk654Y6. Applicants who wish to work with
another person as part of a partnership on one research project should
apply separately.
If you are interested in this training, but you are not based in
Sub-Saharan Africa, please note that the materials for this training
will be made publicly available and the program may be replicated at a
later date for other regions. If you would like to be put on the
outreach list, fill out this brief form
<https://forms.gle/8zf869iaGtHDpH6B8>
(https://forms.gle/8zf869iaGtHDpH6B8). Please contact
bwhitehead(a)internews.orgif you any other questions on the application or
program.
*Laura Schwartz-Henderson *
Senior Program Officer
Global Technology Programs, Internews
_lhenderson(a)internews.org <mailto:lhenderson@internews.org>_ | *Cell
+*1-267-258-8165
*Address* 1133 15^th St NW, Suite 350 Washington, DC 20005 USA
https://globaltech.internews.org/ | @internews
<http://www.twitter.com/internews> |