theregister.co.uk— Here is a screen shot of the Swissinfo.org site as seen from the Tunisian perspective. A fake 404 page implying the site doesn't exisit.
Nov 21, 2005View in Crawl 4
kokojie: Because of the word censoring you mention, and because cryptography attracts suspicion and may be illegal in many countries, Peacefire uses simple content scrambling.
ejayNov 22, 2005
"This happens in the UK where BT censors the internet.""Er... What?"BT's motivations are a little more honourable:"Pierre Danon, chief executive of BT Retail, added: 'You are always caught between the desire to tackle child pornography and freedom of information. But I was fed up with not acting on this and always being told that it was techically impossible.'"<a class="user" href="http://technology.guardian.co.uk/online/news/0,12597,1232506,00.html">http://technology.guardian.co.uk/online/news/0,12597,1232506,00.html</a>
gregcottenNov 22, 2005
^^ By that I meant that I'm thankful the US doesn't block websites from us.
nik420Nov 22, 2005
funny - there was exactly 404 diggs when I saw this
orangetikiNov 22, 2005
God Bless America? Wern't you the same guys who were getting on the DOJ for not prosecuting Sony?
genrebustersNov 22, 2005
Which internet are they censoring? Because the internets we use here are not blocked at all. Maybe those Tasmanian Devils should use our internets?
davidmccabeNov 22, 2005
If you know anyone in a country that implements Internet censorship, do a noble deed and give them access to to the Circumventor program available here:<a class="user" href="http://peacefire.org/">http://peacefire.org/</a>
krizNov 22, 2005
Scary.
azarNov 23, 2005
I used to live in Tunis, Tunisia. What a beautiful place :)
davidmccabeNov 28, 2005
kokojie: Because of the word censoring you mention, and because cryptography attracts suspicion and may be illegal in many countries, Peacefire uses simple content scrambling.