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For Bloggers at Risk: Creating a Contingency Plan - Printable Version +- Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora) +-- Forum: Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Activities and Strategies (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-27.html) +--- Thread: For Bloggers at Risk: Creating a Contingency Plan (/thread-8566.html) |
For Bloggers at Risk: Creating a Contingency Plan - Ed Jewett - 24-12-2011 DECEMBER 21, 2011 | BY JILLIAN C. YORK For Bloggers at Risk: Creating a Contingency PlanIn 2011, we have witnessed the incredible power of bloggers and social media users capturing the world's attention through their activism. At the same time, regimes appear to be quickening the pace of their cat-and-mouse game with netizens, cracking down on speech through the use of surveillance, censorship, and the persecution and detention of bloggers. The increasingly the tech-savvy Syrian regime has been reported to demand login credentials from detainees, for example, while the use of torture in some of the region's prisons continues. Aware of the threats to their safety, bloggers often devise contingency plans in the event they are detained. Syrian blogger Razan Ghazzawi was on her way to a conference in Jordan several weeks ago when she was arrested (she has since been released). In a premeditated effort to protect her contacts, she shared her passwords with trusted friends outside the country with instructions to change them in the event of an arrest. This way, she would not be able to give up the login credentials to her accounts since she would no longer know them. Other bloggers inform their close contacts of their wished contingency plans, determining in advance whether they would want a campaign for their release. A number of the bloggers arrested this year, in Egypt, Syria, and elsewhere, have connections to international activist networks that have experience creating global campaigns and can easily contact government officials, companies, and human rights organizations. Assessing individual risk is neither easy nor straightforward. Therefore, all bloggers--whether well-connected or just starting out--should consider creating a plan in the unfortunate event they are detained. That said, there are numerous resources bloggers can use to stay informed when other bloggers in their country are detained, harassed, or surveilled; when their government is monitoring phone conversations or Internet activity; and when detainees are being compelled to give up information, such as passwords, to authorities. With that in mind, EFF together with Global Voices Advocacy have created a set of questions to consider. This list is by no means exhaustive, but should offer a starting point from which bloggers can develop their own contingency plans. All bloggers should:
*There are numerous organizations out there and we could not possibly name them all. EFF and Global Voices Advocacy are great starts, but we also recommend international organizations Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, FrontLine Defenders, Reporters Without Borders, the Committee to Protect Journalists and Access. If you need assistance finding a local organization in your country, please contact us and we will try to help. This post was co-authored by EFF and Global Voices Advocacy, with special thanks to Zeynep Tufekci. Free Speech International Privacy DEEPLINKS TOPICS
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