“We need more sustainable funding, especially in digital security spaces. Tech is evolving, but our needs are the same ones – fighting the same fights. We need to find funding that links different impacts, like digital security and environmental impacts.”

#WHRDs #DigitalRepression

“We’re in survival mode”: Women human rights defenders on digital repression and movement sustainability

----> New piece on APC.org:

https://www.apc.org/en/news/were-survival-mode-women-human-rights-defenders-digital-repression-and-movement-sustainability

#WHRDs #DigitalRepression

“We’re in survival mode”: Women human rights defenders on digital repression and movement sustainability

Women human rights defenders (WHRDs) have long been at the centre of struggles for justice, democracy, and freedom – from resisting authoritarianism and defending land to advancing gender rights and digital freedoms, benefiting entire communities. Yet these very defenders are systematically targeted and under-resourced in the current realities of the world as repression fuelled by authoritarianism and the surge in anti-rights narratives are steadily rising.

Association for Progressive Communications

RE: https://mastodon.social/@APC/115247812364147772

>>> Across Asia, Africa, Latin America and the SWANA region, women human rights defenders #WHRDs are navigating intensifying digital repression, conflicts, genocides and shrinking civic spaces.

----> We're hosting a cross-regional conversation under APC’s #SafetyforVoices Initiative where WHRDs, feminist researchers, technologists and activists will share lived realities and strategies of resilience, and will envision a sustainable future for our movements.

#DigitalRepression

>>> Are you interested in tackling digital repression and ensuring safety of women human rights defenders?

Join our webinar this Wednesday, 24 September 👇

https://www.apc.org/en/event/webinar-digital-repression-whrds-safety-and-movements-sustainability

#DigitalRepression #WHRDs #Webinar

"Syria was once described as “one of the most dangerous places to use the internet in the world.” Under the rule of Bashar al-Assad, every online step carried risk: deep-packet inspection to facilitate surveillance and “analyze and control the activities of Syrian Internet users,” blocked websites to control the flow of information, and detention of activists, journalists, and even ordinary citizens for their online speech and activities.

With the regime’s fall in late 2024, Syrians see an opportunity for a free, safe, and open web: a virtual space for civil society, entrepreneurs, students, and families long torn apart by war. Yet there are significant challenges ahead. Half of Syria’s infrastructure is “destroyed or rendered dysfunctional,” including its communication networks. This destruction is compounded by decades-long stifling sanctions that not only choke Syrians and hinder humanitarian assistance, but also bar reconstruction and economic recovery, including the export of telecom and dual-use equipment.

Last week, the new U.S. administration suddenly announced its intention to lift its sanctions on Syria, and earlier this week, the EU followed suit, announcing that it would remove all economic sanctions. These welcome developments are critical first steps toward letting Syrians reclaim their digital future. Connectivity underpins humanitarian assistance, open and connected spaces, economy, governance, and people’s ability to enjoy their human, social, and economic rights.
(...)
However, rebuilding Syria’s internet requires not only hardware restoration and sanctions relief, but also policy overhaul. In this blog post, we outline the legacy of Syria’s digital repression and highlight some of the technical and legal challenges the transitional government must overcome to cut ties with the past, and deliver a free and open internet for all Syrians."

https://www.accessnow.org/syria-sanctions-digital-future/

#Syria #Surveillance #DigitalRights #DigitalRepression #Censorship

Syria sanctions: reclaiming Syria's digital future

Lifting sanctions on Syria is a critical first step forward, but work remains for Syrians to reclaim their digital future.

Access Now
Hackers hijacked a Uyghur language tool to spy on exiles in a targeted malware campaign. Experts link it to China’s growing use of #DigitalRepression to silence the diaspora. #CyberSecurity https://washingtonhorizon.com/uyghur-community-targeted-in-spearphishing-campaign-likely-by-chinese-government/
Uyghur community targeted in spearphishing campaign likely by Chinese government

Members of the World Uyghur Congress (WUC) were targeted in March with a malware-laced version of a legitimate Uyghur language tool—likely part of a broader pattern of Chinese state-linked attacks designed to surveil and silence the Uyghur diaspora. According to research from Citizen Lab, a trojanized version of UyghurEditPP,

Chaedrol's Washington Horizon
Today's #elections in #Indonesia could be crucial for the future of its #democracy, says #GIGA expert Andreas Ufen in #GIGAFocus. The problem: #DigitalRepression, #surveillance, and the misuse of #SocialMedia were on the rise under Joko Widodo.
➡️ Read here: https://www.giga-hamburg.de/en/publications/giga-focus/the-rise-of-digital-repression-in-indonesia-under-joko-widodo
The Rise of Digital Repression in Indonesia under Joko Widodo

Indonesia’s government strives to confine civic spaces with the help of surveillance, Internet shutdowns, digital attacks, lawfare, as well as online manipulation by so-called buzzers. This is alarming because right-wing populist Prabowo Subianto could win the presidency in 2024.

freedom on the net – and where we stand in the end of 2023

- Global internet freedom declined for the 13th consecutive year
- Attacks on free expression grew more common around the world
- AI threatens to supercharge online disinformation campaigns and has allowed governments to enhance and refine their online censorship

https://freedomhouse.org/report/freedom-net/2023/repressive-power-artificial-intelligence

#FreedomHouse #FreeSpeech #DigitalRepression #FreedomOnTheNet

The Repressive Power of Artificial Intelligence

Freedom House
Very saddened to see the turn to #digitalrepression in #Tunisia, a country that had been such an inspiration. People being charged under their authoritarian cybercrime law per POMED: https://mailchi.mp/pomed/tunisia-update-travel-ban-for-opposition-figure
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