Egypt shows how easily Internet can be silenced

LONDON, (Reuters) – The move by Egyptian authorities  to seal off the country almost entirely from the Internet shows  how easily a state can isolate its people when telecoms  providers are few and compliant.
In an attempt to stop the frenzied online spread of dissent  against President Hosni Mubarak’s 30-year rule, not only  Facebook and Twitter but the entire Internet was shut down  overnight, leaving some 20 million users stranded.
Hundreds of service providers offer connections in Egypt,  but just four own the infrastructure — Link Egypt,  Vodafone/Raya, Telecom Egypt and Etisalat Misr.
Daniel Karrenberg, chief scientist at RIPE NCC, a European  not-for-profit Internet infrastructure forum, says immature  markets with few providers can achieve such shutdowns relatively  easily.
“The more simple the topology is and the fewer Internet  services providers there are, the easier it is for any  government or the telco themselves to control access into any  geographical area,” he said.
“If you have a relatively diverse telecoms market and a very  much meshed Internet topology then it’s much more difficult to  do than if you have the traditional telecoms structure of two  decades ago and they control all the international connections.
“Obviously that creates a choke point,” he said.
Despite the rapid transformation of the Web during its short  history, and the unprecedented freedom of expression it has  enabled, the Internet still has vulnerable points that can be  exploited by governments or for commercial interests.

CUT OFF FROM THE WORLD
“Virtually all of Egypt’s Internet addresses are now  unreachable, worldwide,” Jim Cowie, chief technology officer of  U.S.-based Internet monitoring firm Renesys wrote on the company  blog (http://www.renesys.com/blog).
“Every Egyptian provider, every business, bank, Internet  cafe, website, school, embassy, and government office that  relied on the big four Egyptian ISPs for their Internet  connectivity is now cut off from the rest of the world.”
Vodafone said in an emailed statement: “All mobile operators  in Egypt have been instructed to suspend services in selected  areas. Under Egyptian legislation, the authorities have the  right to issue such an order and we are obliged to comply.”
A few large organisations with independent connections were  able to stay connected to the Internet.
Cowie said on Friday he was investigating two apparent  exceptions to the block: the Commercial International Bank of  Egypt and the Stock Exchange.
Iran, Tunisia and most recently Syria have imposed Internet  restrictions in attempts to quell opposition, but Egypt’s is by  far the most drastic move so far.
The closest precedent has been in China, which has more  Internet users than any other country and also the strictest  controls. It cut off Internet access to its Xinjiang region for  almost a year after deadly ethnic unrest in 2009.

CENTRALISED
The world’s biggest social network Facebook, and Twitter  with its real-time mini-blog posts, have proved extraordinarily  effective in gathering large numbers of people together and  helping them to be nimble in dodging the authorities.
Lynn St Amour, president of the Internet Society, says they  could have made revolutionaries of many who had not seen  themselves as activists, thanks to the ease of signing up to  groups or sending messages of support while sitting at home.
But the danger of depending on such services is that they  can be blocked simply by targeting their IP addresses, since  they are centralised on a single site — as witnessed in Iran  and Tunisia.
“It’s quite easy, as we’ve seen,” St Amour told Reuters at  the World Economic Forum in Davos.
In Tunisia, dissidents even found their Facebook pages taken  over without their knowledge — something that Facebook was able  to resolve because its own software had been hacked.
But when access to an entire site is blocked from outside,  there is little that Facebook or Twitter can do — although  users often find ways around the problem by using proxy servers.
“We try very hard to keep Facebook available wherever people  want to access it,” Dan Rose, who is responsible for Facebook’s  worldwide business development, said in London this week.
“We have outreach and relationships with governments all  around the world. “We can only do what we can do.”

DIVERSITY
The resilience of the Internet in any particular country  also depends on the diversity of its international providers,  the routes in an out of a country.
In 2008, Egypt suffered an 80 percent outage of Internet  services when submarine cables in the Mediterranean linking  Egypt to the rest of the world were accidentally cut.
On Friday, key fibre-optic cables that pass through Egypt as  they link Europe to Asia appeared unaffected.
Renesys’s Cowie contrasted a country such as Egypt with  those that have highly dispersed international connections.
“In the United States you have every global carrier  available to you, you have multiple cable landing points … you  have a country that effectively can’t be taken off the  Internet,” he told Reuters.