New America Scores $2M For What Others Already Do

Autonomous Internet
DefDog Recommends....

Might this come home to roost (and bite)?

U.S. Underwrites Internet Detour Around Censors

Phi Beta Iota: This is, along with the Iranian nut-jobs trying to liberate Iran with CIA and JSOG money for outside-in propaganda (instead of enpowering the people with Autonomous Internet capabilities), is a classic exposure of how little the Department of State actually knows about what is going on in the Liberation Technology movement–Freedom Box, for example, along with various elements for Wireless Mesh Internet and of course MondoNet.   Others are doing much more, generally free.  Internet in a box already exists, SolarOne and VECTOR are just two examples-and then there is the $169 device that turns any cell phone into a satellite phone–the $2 million being wasted on New America could have been used to create collect call capability for any of the satellites covering Iran and other places of interest.  Nothing has changed–Washington is both ignorant and corrupt.  This was a publicity/ sweetheart deal isolated from reality.  Internet in a Box: one laptop, one cell phone, and one $169 adapter, plus a free satellite channel.  Duh.

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Marcus sends:

1.  in a hardcore denied area, one with real population and resource controls, a suitcase full of comms gear is probably going to be perceived as a suitcase full of spy gear if the local internal service gets their hands on it;

2.  if this proves out, could conceivably undercut, in part, the very rationale for US Special Forces:  influencing local peoples to do USG bidding by controlling flow of supplies through US-controlled and operated secure comms between target country and base country.

See Also:

Continue reading “New America Scores $2M For What Others Already Do”

Inside Iran — Young, Impoverished, & Restless

05 Iran, Advanced Cyber/IO, Autonomous Internet, Civil Society, Cultural Intelligence, Government, IO Impotency, Peace Intelligence
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From a senior engineer of Iranian descent often in Iran:

The view from within Iran is that, “help us get rid of this regime”, people are even willing to welcome an all out air assault if it ends up with an eventual regime change , move to secularize, and early stages of democracy.

I do not see an attack on Iran in the coming year. However if there is ever a good time to attack the regime with air strikes this is it. The  removal of the  subsidies by the government  every day common goods which accrued about 3 months ago which has now resulted in a major price increase on common good is just hitting the average poke book.

The utilities have gone up over %50 and in some cases more than doubled.

The number of factories closing down and the businesses going out of business which results in major layoffs is on the rise. The oil exports are decreasing and more oil wells are being shut down due to technical problems.

The majority of people have lost hope of meaningful reform.

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How Egyptian Activists Kept Ushahidi Alive

Autonomous Internet
Patrick Meier

How Egyptian Activists Kept Their Ushahidi Project Alive Under Mubarak

Patrick Meier | May 25, 2011 

This is my second blog post on the U-Shahid project in Egypt. The first one analyzed 2,000+ reports mapped on the Ushahidi platform during the country's recent Parliamentary Elections. Egypt is one of my dissertation case studies and in this blog post I summarize some initial findings based on a series of interviews I had several Egyptian activists who were part of the U-Shahid project.

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OpenMesh: Humans Are the Routers

Autonomous Internet
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Shervin Pishevar Feb 27, 2011
TechCrunch

Editor’s note: Guest author Shervin Pishevar is the founder of the OpenMesh Project, SGN and an active angel investor.

On January 7, 2010 I was ushered into a small private dinner with Secretary Hillary Clinton at the State Department along with the inventor of Twitter, Jack Dorsey, Eric Schmidt, CEO of Google and a few others. We were there to talk about technology and 21st Century Diplomacy. As we mingled I noticed next to me the small table that Thomas Jefferson wrote the first drafts of the Declaration of Independence. I was inspired by the history around us as we discussed the unfolding history before us. I was sitting in front of Secretary Clinton and when she asked me a question I said, “Secretary Clinton, the last bastion of dictatorship is the router.” That night seeded some of the ideas that were core to Secretary Clinton’s important Internet Freedoms Speech on January 21, 2010.

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Phi Beta Iota: This is the kind of initiative that the Open Source Agency (OSA) could and should sponsor, integrating exploitation of and proliferation of the Open Source Tri-Fecta (open source software, open spectrum, and open source intelligence or decision-support).

REVOLUTION 2.0 CLOSED 17 May 2011

08 Wild Cards, Autonomous Internet, Cultural Intelligence, YouTube
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16 May 2011

BAHRAIN:  How radical are Bahrain's Shia?

EGYPT:  Could Egypt's revolution become mirage in the desert?

IRAN-BAHRAIN:  Iranian ships carrying aid to Bahrain turned back in Persian Gulf

IRAN-SYRIA:  ‘Nakba' clashes: Iran, Syria trying to turn Arab Spring fury into attacks on Israel?

ISRAEL:  The Arab Revolution is knocking at Israel's door

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LEBANON-SYRIA:  Syrian soldiers who defected to Lebanon are arrested

LEBANON-SYRIA:  Hundreds flee Syria crackdown to Lebanon

PALESTINE:  Arab spring puts Palestine back on agenda

PALESTINE-ISRAEL-MALAYSIA:  Malaysian aid ship to Palestine attacked by Israeli naval forces

SYRIA:  Syria: mass grave found in Dera'a

SYRIA:  Bashar Assad Is Almost Illegitimate

YEMEN: Yemeni MPs establish coalition to support revolution for change

Past Dots Below the Line; Basics on Revolution At the End

Continue reading “REVOLUTION 2.0 CLOSED 17 May 2011”

Could BitTorrent Be The Distributed Social Network People Have Been Clamoring For?

Advanced Cyber/IO, Autonomous Internet
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Could BitTorrent Be The Distributed Social Network People Have Been Clamoring For?

from the it's-got-the-distribution… dept

Innovation by Mike Masnick

TechDirt, Thu, May 12th 2011

One of the key things we've been noting over the past few months is how many more people are beginning to recognize the benefits of having systems and services that really are more distributed and decentralized, rather than very centralized. The problems with centralized systems should be obvious: not only are there single points of failure where a single mistake can knock out the entire system, but it also puts a single party in control as well. And that can lead to problems, say, when it comes to handing over private information to the government (or companies) without proper legal process.

Among the areas that have grown up with very centralized systems are various social networks, such as Facebook. In response, there's definitely been a call for alternative, more open and more distributed social networking systems, such as Diaspora, which has received a ton of hype, but still has a long, long way to go.

But could another player enter the space and have the infrastructure in place to make it work? It appears that BitTorrent is betting yes. The company is launching its new, much more user friendly Chrysalis interface for its software, which really goes a long way in moving the software towards being a media manager program:

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Tip of the Hat to Colin Hawkett at Google Group Next Net.