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Dot Com for Dictators
By Shanthi Kalathil
March/April 2003
Call it Authoritarianism 2.0: Forced to choose between jumping on the information
superhighway or languishing on the unwired byways of technology, many authoritarian
regimes are choosing to go along for the Internet ride. In addition to helping
autocratic rulers compete in the global economy, the Internet and other information
and communication technologies (ICTs) can streamline authoritarian states and
help them govern more effectively—attractive options for many leaders.
In some of these countries, reform-minded officials are even using the Internet
to increase transparency, reduce corruption, and make government more responsive
to citizens.
But hardheaded autocrats aren’t suddenly soliciting e-mail advice from
dissenters. Controlling information has always been a cornerstone of authoritarian
rule, and leaders are naturally suspicious of the Web. Public Internet access
could expose large swaths of a population to forbidden information and images
or galvanize grass-roots opposition, as has already happened in many countries
where Internet users are growing in number and challenging oppressive governments.
As a result, authoritarian regimes are deploying sophisticated censorship schemes
to stay one step ahead of online dissidents.
Such instances of technological one-upmanship have created the appearance of
an Internet arms race pitting would-be revolutionaries and democracy-hungry
publics against states determined to block, censor, and monitor citizens. Indeed,
anecdotes about empowered cyberdissidents, amplified by faith in the democratic
nature of the technology, have helped spread the notion that the Internet ineluctably
thwarts authoritarian regimes. Little surprise, then, that human rights advocates
and press freedom organizations publicly...
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