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The Internet

Myanmar's Internet Suppression (reuters.com) 38

In Myanmar, the junta's intensifying crackdowns on protesters in the street are mirrored by its rising restrictions online. Reuters: In the early hours of Feb. 1, Myanmar's military seized power in a coup that has ignited months of mass protests. The military junta's security forces have since killed more than 550 civilians in crackdowns on the pro-democracy protesters, including children. To try to suppress protests, the junta has imposed increasing restrictions on internet access, culminating in a near total shutdown as of April 2. That has made it extremely difficult for people to access information, upload videos of protests, or organize. These tactics have also crippled businesses and limited access to medical information during the coronavirus pandemic. A Myanmar junta spokesperson did not respond to calls seeking comment. At a March 23 press conference, spokesperson Zaw Min Tun said the junta had no immediate plans to ease internet restrictions because violence was being provoked online.

Protesters in Myanmar, who asked to stay anonymous, told Reuters they were terrified about being shut off from the world, with no way to broadcast news of the protests or of the army's killings to those outside of Myanmar. "We Myanmar people are in the dark now," said one young protester. "News from Myanmar is going to disappear," another added. Governments around the world are increasingly using internet restrictions during political crises as a tool to limit free expression and hide human rights abuses, according to data from the digital rights organization Access Now. The U.N. Human Rights Council has condemned such intentional disruptions as a human rights violation. "Whenever the internet is shut down during such critical moments we would hear or document or see reports of human rights abuses, and that is what is happening in Myanmar," said Felicia Anthonio, a campaigner with Access Now. "The government is cracking down on protesters to ensure they do not let the rest of the world know what is happening." Since the coup, the junta has ordered telecom companies to carry out dozens of shutdowns. These shutdowns targeted mobile and wireless internet, which is the only available internet for most in the country.

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Myanmar's Internet Suppression

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  • by OrangeTide ( 124937 ) on Friday April 09, 2021 @07:02PM (#61256980) Homepage Journal

    Today the UN’s special envoy for Myanmar was turned away [scmp.com] by the military junta.

    It is obvious that Myanmar's military will bottle up their nation until they can quell the civilian protests. And the West is unlikely to intervene unilaterally, and the UN Security council will never do anything as long as China is ready to veto it.

    • And what exactly do you propose the West do? They have only three options: Diplomatic pressure, economic sanctions, and military intervention. The first two would achieve absolutely nothing in this situation,and the third would create a whole new set of even worse problems.

  • by iggymanz ( 596061 ) on Friday April 09, 2021 @07:11PM (#61256992)

    We're told we fight wars for freedom (remember Bush talking about how the Taliban treated women badly, lolz).

    We don't give a shit about freedom or bullshit like "being the world's policeman." If we gave a flying fuck about freedom or policing we'd have vaporized Myanmar's government and North Korea's too.

    So we're going to shed tears for these 550 civilians (thousands really)??

  • What the hell, Myanmar military? Murdering your own citizens? What the actual FUCK?
  • Old chestnut. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Ostracus ( 1354233 ) on Friday April 09, 2021 @07:35PM (#61257050) Journal

    Apparently there's some "damage" the internet can't route around.

  • Starlink (Score:5, Interesting)

    by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Friday April 09, 2021 @09:13PM (#61257220)

    A Starlink terminal is the size of a pizza box, and will be smaller in the future. People are hiding bigger stuff than that from the government. In addition itâ(TM)s virtually guaranteed that the kids of the elites will openly have a bunch of them. You canâ(TM)t stop satellite. For example satellite is illegal in Iran yet 50% or more of homes in Iran openly have satellite dishes. Why? Because the elites wanted them and then it became normalized.

    Why the heck arenâ(TM)t we funding Starlink and Kuiper as a national security and humanitarian priority?

    • A satellite is parked overhead, hoovering up all Junta and military phone calls and comms. Only that that was the case 5 years ago, so the US should have a pretty good idea who is naughty and who is nice. And they probably know where their money is secreted. If they were serious, they would confiscate the assets of lower leaders, and work their way up. The complete lack of action probably indicates everyone is on the take, and there are no 'nice' people in the wings. Or they could just publish juicy transcr
    • You can stop satellite, but the type of jaming you need for that would cause disruption to service outside if the country doing the jamming and thus create some nasty diplomatic consequences. Also Starlink costs $99 a month, and the government can easily block financial transactions to pay for the service, ensuring that satellite service would only be available to people who are both financially well-off and have the right connections to work around the financial restrictions - not the type of people that t

      • Also Starlink costs $99 a month, and the government can easily block financial transactions to pay for the service

        Didn't you hear? Ol' Musky is all-in on BTC. You'll be able to pay for your starlink connection by using custom ASICs and stolen power.

        However, it won't be until a later generation of satellites go up that they won't need base stations, and starlink can actually help people whose internet is being cut off by their government. And even then, it will only be effective against poor-ass governments that can't fly drones around to detect signals.

        • Even drones to detect the signal won't be easy .. the signal from the terminal is highly direction .. you would need to blanket a whole country with drones .. no country can afford that.

      • You assume kids of the elites or elites themselves don't turn on their authorities .. they do quite a lot actually for a variety of reasons ranging from their own ambitions to guilt.

  • When the Rohingya were being attacked by the Military (genocide mentioned in some circles), Mynmar civilian leadership (Aung San Suu Kyi and company) and the people seem to be supportive of those attacks. They even asked international observers to butt out and refused all offers of assistance.

    Now that the military is attacking the civilian leadership and the other demonstrators, they are screaming for international help. Before the Rohingya attacks, international support for Mynmar's civilian leadership was

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