Thanks JNM
On Tue, Apr 2, 2013 at 12:48 PM, Jean-Noël Montagné <jnm@???>wrote:
> **
>
> newly published, may interest some people on bricolist. PDF download.
>
>
> Resistance, Liberation Technology
> and Human Rights in the Digital Age
> by Giovanni Ziccardi
> 300 pages, pdf
> http://cryptome.org/2013/03/hacking-digital-dissidence.pdf
>
> summary below
>
>
> JN
>
>
>
> summary
>
> *Opening Remarks: Hacking and Digital Dissidence*..............................
> 1
> 1.1 Using Computers for the Pursuit of Political and Social
> Changes and for the Bene fi t of All Mankind
> ..................................... 1
> 1.2 From Early Hackers to Digital Resistance Activities
> ........................ 5
> 1.3 The So-Called * Twitter Revolutions*
> .................................................... 7
> 1.4 The Worldwide Scenario, and Some Preliminary
> Interpretative Questions
> ..................................................................... 9
> References
> ...................................................................................................
> 22
> * 2 Digital Resistance, Digital Liberties and Digital Transparency*........... 27
> 2.1 A Preliminary De fi nition of * Digital Resistance*
> and * Digital Liberties*
> ..........................................................................
> 27
> 2.1.1 Some Focal Aspects of Digital Dissidence
> ............................ 27
> 2.1.2 Preliminary Legal and Political Remarks
> .............................. 28
> 2.1.3 The Power of Technology in Critical Contexts
> and the New Public Sphere
> .................................................... 30
> 2.2 The Fundamental Role of a Secure (and Peer-Reviewed)
> Liberation Technology: The * Haystack* Case-History
> ......................... 32
> 2.3 Two Key Aspects of Digital Resistance Activities,
> and Several Case Studies
> ................................................................... 36
> 2.3.1 The Key Aspects of Dissident Activities
> ............................... 36
> 2.3.2 Digital Resistance Case-Studies
> ............................................. 41
> 2.4 Open Government, Collaborative Transparency
> and Civic Hacking as a Form of Digital Resistance
> .......................... 47
> 2.4.1 The Idea of Government as a Platform
> for Transparency.....................................................................
> 47
> 2.4.2 The Metaphor of Government 2.0 and the Idea
> of Collaborative Transparency
> ............................................... 49
> 2.4.3 Citizen Engagement for the Oversight
> of Political Activity
> ................................................................ 51
> 2.4.4 Collaborative Mapping and Digital Resistance
> ...................... 59
> References
> ...................................................................................................
> 68
> * 3 Hacking and Digital Dissidence Activities*.............................................. 73
> 3.1 The Role of Hackers in the Landscape of Digital Resistance
> .......... 73
> 3.2 A First Analysis of Common Threats to Digital
> Freedom and to Hacker Activities
> ................................................... 74
> 3.3 Being a Hacker in This Framework
> ................................................. 76
> 3.3.1 Thinking Like a Hacker
> ....................................................... 76
> 3.3.2 State Antagonism, Fear and Violence
> .................................. 79
> 3.4 A Brand New Playground
> ................................................................ 81
> 3.4.1 Liberation Technologies
> ....................................................... 81
> 3.4.2 Anonymity and Bloggers' Rights
> ........................................ 84
> 3.4.3 Innovation
> ............................................................................
> 86
> 3.4.4 Intellectual Property and Privacy
> ......................................... 86
> 3.4.5 EPIC Activities in the Field of Privacy
> ................................ 88
> 3.4.6 Transparency
> ........................................................................
> 89
> 3.5 A New Perspective on Hacking
> ....................................................... 90
> 3.5.1 The Essence of hacking
> ....................................................... 90
> 3.5.2 The Hacker Spirit and Some Lessons
> from the Ushahidi Project
> .................................................... 91
> 3.5.3 A New Breed of Hackers
> ..................................................... 94
> 3.6 The* Do-It-Yourself* Approach
> ........................................................... 97
> 3.7 The Hacker Ethic
> .............................................................................
> 99
> 3.8 Hacking and Crime
> ..........................................................................
> 101
> 3.9 Threats to Hackers
> ...........................................................................
> 105
> 3.9.1 The EFF Report Unintended Consequences ........................
> 105
> 3.9.2 Some Signi fi cant Recent Legal Cases:
> Cease-and-Desist Actions
> .................................................... 106
> 3.10 Hacking Electronic Voting Machines
> for the Purpose of Transparency
> ...................................................... 117
> References
> ...................................................................................................
> 122
> * 4 Digital Resistance, Digital Liberties and Human Rights*....................... 125
> 4.1 Internet and Human Rights
> .............................................................. 125
> 4.2 Internet and the* Universal Declaration of Human Rights*............... 130
> 4.3 The Council of Europe and the Human Rights Guidelines
> for Internet Service Providers: The Role of ISPs
> in Human Rights Environments and Protection
> ............................... 133
> 4.4 The WSIS Declaration of Principles
> ................................................ 134
> 4.5 The 2011 United Nations Report on the Promotion
> and Protection of the Right to Freedom of Opinion
> and Expression
> .................................................................................
> 137
> 4.6 A Charter of Human Rights and Principles for the Internet
> ............ 144
> 4.7 The "Bill of Rights" Projects
> ........................................................... 152
> 4.7.1 The Internet Bill of Rights Drafted
> within the IGF Works
> ........................................................... 152
> 4.7.2 The Internet Rights and Principles Dynamic
> Coalition Bill of Rights
> ........................................................ 154
> 4.7.3 A Bill of Rights in Cyberspace
> ............................................ 155
> 4.7.4 The EFF Bill of Privacy Rights
> for* Social Network Users*..................................................... 156
> 4.8 A Human Rights Approach to the Mobile Internet
> ............................ 157
> 4.9 The Relationship Between Human Rights and Technology
> Sales to Oppressive Regimes
> ............................................................. 159
> References
> ...................................................................................................
> 159
> * 5 The Use of Liberation Technology*........................................................... 161
> 5.1 Technical Resistance Tactics
> .............................................................. 161
> 5.2 Surveillance Self-Defense or Self-Defense Against
> Surveillance and Monitoring
> .............................................................. 167
> 5.3 A Recent Circumvention Tool Usage Report
> .................................... 169
> 5.4 Tools and Guides
> ................................................................................
> 171
> 5.4.1 Leaping Over the Firewall: A Review of Censorship
> Circumvention Tools by* Freedom House*............................. 171
> 5.4.2 Ten Fundamental Aspects of a Typical Liberation
> Technology Tool
> .................................................................. 176
> 5.4.3 An Interesting (Comparative) Article
> on Real Anonimity of VPN Systems Users ......................... 180
> References
> ...................................................................................................
> 184
> * 6 Digital Activism, Internet Control, Transparency,*
> *Censorship, Surveillance and Human Rights:
> An International Perspective*................................................................... 187
> 6.1 An Introductory Overview
> ................................................................. 187
> 6.1.1 The Global OpenNet Initiative Analysis
> .............................. 187
> 6.1.2 Techniques and Tools Commonly Used to Censor .............. 201
> 6.2 An Analysis of Several Countries with Critical
> Human Rights Issues
> ..........................................................................
> 203
> 6.2.1 Burma: Internet and Human Rights in a Particular
> Technological, Political and Legal Framework ................... 203
> 6.2.2 Cuba: Internet Control, User Restrictions, Legal
> and Regulatory Frameworks, Blogosphere,
> Digital Dissidents and Civil Society ....................................
> 214
> 6.2.3 South Korea: Digital Resistance Issues
> ............................... 227
> 6.2.4 Saudi Arabia: The Digital Liberties Landscape
> ................... 230
> 6.2.5 Syria: Digital Liberties Issues
> .............................................. 233
> 6.2.6 Iran: Internet and Digital Liberties Issues
> ............................ 239
> 6.2.7 China: The Internet and Types and Levels
> of Chinese Internet Censorship
> ............................................ 247
> 6.2.8 Turkmenistan: Censorship and Control
> ............................... 259
> 6.2.9 Uzbekistan: Internet, Censorship and Surveillance .............
> 262
> 6.2.10 Vietnam: Digital Resistance and Censorship
> ....................... 269
> 6.2.11 Australia: Internet Filtering Policies, Digital Liberties
> and Circumvention Tools
> ..................................................... 273
> 6.2.12 Iceland: Digital Resistance Issues
> and Freedom of Information
> ................................................ 279
> 6.2.13 India: Freedom of Speech, Freedom of Information
> and Electronic Censorship
> ................................................... 283
> 6.2.14 Russia. Internet and Human Rights: Political
> and Technological Frameworks ...........................................
> 290
> 6.2.15 North Korea: The Main Digital Liberties Issues
> .................. 295
> 6.3 Revolts and Digital Dissidence in Egypt and Tunisia:
> Where It All Began
> ............................................................................
> 301
> 6.3.1 A Brief Summary of Digital Dissidence in Egypt ...............
> 301
> 6.3.2 A Brief Summary of Digital Dissidence in Tunisia .............
> 303
> References
> ...................................................................................................
> 304
> * 7 Conclusions: The Landscape of Digital Liberties and the Future*........ 309
> 7.1 Human Rights in the Digital Era and the Role of Law
> ...................... 309
> 7.2 Technology as an* Antibody*................................................................ 311
> 7.3 The Technological Scenario
> ............................................................... 313
> 7.4 The Relationships Between Hacking and Digital Resistance
> ............ 314
> References
> ...................................................................................................
> 315
> * Author Index*
> ....................................................................................................
> 317
> *Subject Index*...................................................................................................
> 321
>
>
>
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