[ooni-talk] [New report] Uganda's Social Media Tax through the lens of network measurements

Maria Xynou maria at openobservatory.org
Mon Nov 12 12:08:22 UTC 2018


Hello,

Today, in collaboration with our Ugandan partners, DefendDefenders, OONI
co-published a new research report: "Uganda's Social Media Tax through
the lens of network measurements".

Our research report is available via:

* OONI site: https://ooni.io/post/uganda-social-media-tax/

* DefendDefenders site:
https://www.defenddefenders.org/publication/Uganda%27sSocialMediaTax/

As of 1st July 2018, Uganda has introduced a new OTT (Over The Top) tax
-  commonly referred to as the Social Media Tax - which requires people
in Uganda to pay taxes to the government in order to access several
online social media platforms. Unless this tax is paid, access to these
specific social media platforms is blocked.

Civil society groups in Uganda have expressed concern that this new
Social Media Tax will affect marginalized communities the most.

Thanks to OONI Probe users in Uganda, internet censorship has been
measured in the country since 2014 (previously enabling the detection
and examination of social media censorship during the 2016 elections).

In light of the new OTT tax, we joined forces with DefendDefenders to
test the taxed social media platforms and to run a series of
experiments, testing VPN blocking as well.

Our key findings include:

* Ugandan ISPs primarily implement internet censorship by means of HTTP
blocking, resetting connections to taxed and banned sites.

* MTN appears to block Twitter, Facebook, WhatsApp, Instagram, and
Snapchat by means of TCP/IP blocking. The TCP/IP blocking of Snapchat
may have caused collateral damage, possibly affecting thousands of sites
hosted on the same CDN. However, even if this is the case, it doesn't
affect most MTN users since MTN's proxy circumvents IP-level blocking.

* Social media censorship varies across ASNs. Africell, for example,
attempts to block Telegram, while MTN doesn't. Different social media
sites were blocked by different ISPs. Some Ugandan ISPs don't block
access to social media sites at all (such as Smile Communications and
state-owned Uganda Telecom).

* The blocking of circumvention tool sites also varies across ASNs. MTN
blocks access to VPN servers using the OpenVPN protocol and to
torproject.org, but not to the Tor network.

The above findings are based on the collection and analysis of OONI
network measurements from multiple local vantage points in Uganda:
https://api.ooni.io/files/by_country/UG

To reproduce and expand upon our study, you can:

1. Run OONI Probe: https://ooni.io/install/

2. Use OONI Run to test the sites of your choice: https://run.ooni.io/

3. Download OONI data for your own analysis: https://api.ooni.io/

Warm thanks to all the volunteers in Uganda who have run OONI Probe,
making this research possible!

Best,

Maria.

-- 
Maria Xynou
Research & Partnerships Director
Open Observatory of Network Interference (OONI)
https://ooni.torproject.org/
PGP Key Fingerprint: 2DC8 AFB6 CA11 B552 1081 FBDE 2131 B3BE 70CA 417E


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