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The Internet Technology

Why the Internet in Cuba Has Become a US Political Hot Potato (theguardian.com) 48

After Havana shut down online access for 72 hours, the battle is on to keep the country connected. From a report: Cubans used to joke about Napoleon Bonaparte chatting to Mikhail Gorbachev, George W Bush and Fidel Castro in the afterlife. "If I'd have had your prudence, I'd never have fought Waterloo," the French emperor tells the last Soviet leader. "If I'd have had your military might, I'd have won Waterloo," he tells the Texan. Turning last to Castro, the emperor says: "If I'd have had Granma [the Cuban Communist party daily], I'd have lost Waterloo but nobody would have known." The joke no longer does the rounds.

With millions of Cubans now online, the state's monopoly on mass communication has been deeply eroded. But after social media helped catalyse historic protests on the island last month, the government temporarily shut the internet down. Full connectivity returned 72 hours later, but the issue has become a hot potato in the US. Hundreds of Cuban-Americans marched against the regime in Washington last week, and politicians are trying to leverage political capital: Florida senator Marco Rubio has called for the US to beam balloon-supplied internet to the island nation, while Joe Biden said his administration is assessing whether it can increase Cuba's connectivity. Experts say it's unclear how internet access could be increased at scale if the host nation is unwilling to cooperate.

"I haven't seen anything other than pie in the sky," said Larry Press, professor of information systems at California State University. Past US government attempts to bolster connectivity in Cuba read like a John Le Carre novel. In 2009, Alan Gross, a subcontractor for the US Agency for International Development, was arrested for distributing satellite equipment. His work was funded thanks to a US law that explicitly calls for the overthrow of the Castro regime. (Gross was later released as part of the restoration of US-Cuban relations during Barack Obama's second term.) Attempts to smuggle satellite ground stations disguised as surf boards on to the island were similarly foiled.

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Why the Internet in Cuba Has Become a US Political Hot Potato

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  • Just smuggle some Starlink [wikipedia.org] dishes over there. Sure, it's spotty at low latitudes, but it gets better on an almost monthly basis. [spaceflightnow.com]
    • Not until I get my starlink equipment.
    • by Rhipf ( 525263 )

      Since the Starlink dishes seem to be geolocked (at least currently) smuggling them into Cuba probably isn't a solution unless you can get Musk to authorize it.

      • ...unless you can get Musk to authorize it.

        Have you tried asking? This seems like a trivial problem to solve compared with getting thousands of satellites into orbit.

        • by Rhipf ( 525263 )

          I'm not going to bother asking since I don't care if Cubans get Starlink dishes or not. 8^)

          I was only pointing out that just smuggling dishes into the country isn't enough you would also need to get the participation of Musk in order for Starlink to be a viable option.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by mpoulton ( 689851 ) on Thursday August 05, 2021 @04:13PM (#61660909)

      Interference with Cuba is an act of war.

      "Interference" with another country is not inherently an "act of war" as that term is traditionally defined. Of course, sovereign nations can choose to get as pissed as they want about whatever they choose, and declare anything to be an "act of war" in their judgment. But providing communications to citizens is not something which would usually be considered so.

      If your implication is that the US is morally wrong for trying to give Cubans free access to the Internet, against their government's wishes, I humbly suggest that your moral compass is severely defective. Free and open communications are a fundamental human right, and governments which deny their citizens the means to communicate are oppressive.

      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • or trying to at least. Or how about that unpleasantness in Venezuela [vox.com]?


        Trick question, it's not an act of war if the other country can't fight back.

        I don't think I'd be as annoyed with all this if the US was honest, but we act like we're spreading freedom while we coddle up with dictators. [wikipedia.org]

        This isn't just me being a whiny liberal either. If we're willing to act this way with other countries what makes you think we won't do the same to US Citizens?
      • Where do you, morally, draw the line on action?

        Country A doesn't like the internal actions of Country B's government - where does it have a right to act? Where does that right to act end? Its another, sovereign, country, what gives Country A the right to act within Country B's borders?

        Imagine it this way - right now there are a number of US states which restrict or are attempting to restrict the right of a woman to have a choice regarding her own body when it comes to abortion. Does that give another cou

      • If your implication is that the US is morally wrong for trying to give Cubans free access to the Internet (...)

        While at the same time depriving them from anything through the embargo...

    • The burden is on you to support your assertion.

      Under what specific law(s) is "interference" (a nebulous term) an act of war? How is "distributing connectivity" (the user can choose what to access) an act of war? Under which Convention or other agreement to which the US is signatory?

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      Providing internet is not an act of war. It's just an extension of the long running world wide practice of making sure plenty of shortwave and medium wave radio signals are available across the border (any border). Radio Moscow, Voice of America, and the BBC World service are not acts of war.

  • Attempts to smuggle satellite ground stations disguised as surf boards on to the island were similarly foiled.

    Sounds like a plot from a Saturday morning kids' drama.

    • by ddtmm ( 549094 )
      And they would have gotten away with it if it wasn't for those meddling American kids.
  • The Republican party want to take credit for making Cuba a democratic country rather than the communist country it is now.
    • Re:It is simple (Score:4, Informative)

      by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Thursday August 05, 2021 @05:44PM (#61661263)

      It's simpler than that, and it's not about democracy. The Republican Party sees appeasing the large and vocal Cuban exile community as crucial to their chances of winning Florida's 29 electoral votes every four years.

      The Cubans, in turn, are largely supporters (or their descendants) of the dictator Fulgencio Batista that fled Cuba after the revolution.

  • Remember the slashdot post about Cuba jamming Ham Radio ? https://tech.slashdot.org/stor... [slashdot.org] The Marathon, FL Miniblimp is what they would use to investigate this and it's also what they'll use to provide internet to Cuba. YAY Miniblimp! Seeing this thing from a distance, you can't see the tether and it looks like a UFO. It's the coolest thing ever :)
  • Embargo (Score:5, Insightful)

    by manu0601 ( 2221348 ) on Thursday August 05, 2021 @05:45PM (#61661277)
    If USA politicians really want to help Cuban people, they could lift the embargo.
  • by spitzak ( 4019 ) on Thursday August 05, 2021 @05:59PM (#61661371) Homepage

    Is that Cuba *had* working internet. I always assumed it was heavily censored, plus most of the population could not get devices that would display it. Both obviously false based on the fact that these new actions are changes from before and easily observed by the population.

    I don't know what this says about the accuracy of news, or my attention to it, that I was so far off base.

  • US already has many areas with either only low speed internet or no internet itself.
    Shouldnt they be fixing that first before spending money increasing connectivity / speed elsewhere?

    lol

  • It's interesting. The country that kept cutting Cuba's internet access by "accidentally" forgetting to add the submarine cable that provides Cuba's link to the world from the No Anchorage maps is now criticizing Cuba for cutting the cable themselves.

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