Flickr Filtered in Iran, UAE: Resistance February 17, 2007
Internet users in the United Arab Emirates and Iran discovered some time ago that their access to Flickr, the popular social networking-photo archive site, had been blocked yet again, for the third time. In the UAE, the major Internet service provider, Etisalat, is the responsible party. But dedicated photojournalists and ordinary users alike may have a new technological countermeasure, a free Firefox extension called Access Flickr that is the brainchild of Hamed Saber, an Iranian with a technical bent, an ingrained opposition to Big Brother, and a belief that “no one has the right to censor anything for me.”
In a Global Voices interview with Sami Ben Gharbia, Saber said that he was unaware of any similar Firefox extension specifically designed to circumvent censorship. The idea was to create something similar to Tor, but more accessible. Saber says that the tool is “so simple…not sophisticated and powerful like Tor.” It sounds easy enough:
This extension just substitutes some parameters in HTTP request header before sending it, and after receiving the response, again it substitutes some other parameters in the HTTP response header. The source code is not encoded, and the extension is open source, anyone can read the simple source code!
Other forms of resistance to internet filtering in Iran ( Filtering Country Study) and the UAE (Filtering Country Study) are spearheaded by the Open Net Initiative. Because the technology is simple, the obvious solution for the censors is to block the extension—and what will Saber do if that happens?
He’ll just develop another “bypassing way.”
With people like Saber in the world, we can all take heart. We are, collectively, smarter than they are.
Related Link: Freedom for UAE Flickr Users Petition UAE
Tags: vs | users | Filter | Extension | Community | Citizens | access | United Arab Emirates | Technology | saber | Middle East | Iran | internet | hamed | Flickr | Africa
- Posted in : Uncategorized
- Author : M. Riggs
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