[governance] The Inside Story of How Facebook Responded toTunisian Hacks.
Michael Gurstein
gurstein at gmail.com
Mon Jan 24 11:34:53 EST 2011
This has a lot of significance in a lot of different directions: global
Internet governance, rights and practices in an Internet environment,
Facebook as Internet environment, etc.etc.
M
------------------------------------------------
The Inside Story of How Facebook Responded to Tunisian Hacks.
It was on Christmas Day that Facebook's Chief Security Officer Joe
Sullivan first noticed strange things going on in Tunisia. Reports
started to trickle in that political-protest pages were being hacked.
"We were getting anecdotal reports saying, 'It looks like someone logged
into my account and deleted it,'" Sullivan said.
For Tunisians, it was another run-in with Ammar, the nickname they've
given to the authorities that censor the country's Internet. They'd come
to expect it.
http://tinyurl.com/62mvmgd
____________________________________________________________
You received this message as a subscriber on the list:
governance at lists.cpsr.org
To be removed from the list, visit:
http://www.igcaucus.org/unsubscribing
For all other list information and functions, see:
http://lists.cpsr.org/lists/info/governance
To edit your profile and to find the IGC's charter, see:
http://www.igcaucus.org/
Translate this email: http://translate.google.com/translate_t
More information about the Governance
mailing list