A Week in Review: December 21, 2018
This week in review, Internet Monitor covers blocked Internet access in Utah, a plan to expand Internet access in Africa, and a possible end to Google's Project Dragonfly.
This week in review, Internet Monitor covers blocked Internet access in Utah, a plan to expand Internet access in Africa, and a possible end to Google's Project Dragonfly.
This week in review, Internet Monitor covers Internet Society’s snapshot of post-hurricane Caribbean connectivity, a Russian human rights group's report on Russian Internet content controls, and Cambodia’s block of The Cambodia Daily’s website.
This week, Internet Monitor covers a new report from Internet Society on Africa's Internet Economy, social media blocks in Pakistan, and a Detroit grassroots program bridging the digital divide.
This week, IM covers a Mozilla survey on the connected future, an Internet service disruption in the U.S., and Citizen Lab report on WeChat censorship
This week, IM covers Project Loon in Puerto Rico, Cameroon's Internet shutdown, and a Swazi campaign against YouTube
This week, Internet Monitor takes a look at China’s latest crackdown on VPNs, restricted Internet access in the Gaza Strip, and the July 12 day of action for net neutrality.
This week, the Internet Monitor reports on possible Internet outages in Nigeria, Donald Trump’s pledge to bring Internet to rural America, Egypt’s increased blockages, and a Palestinian campaign for more Internet freedom.
This week, the Internet Monitor learns about the State of the Internet from Akamai, the use of machine learning in Alphabet’s Project Loon, the AT&T and China Mobile deal, the rollback of privacy rules in the FCC, and the arrival of 5G in 2020.
While most Iraqi internet users often suffer from a combination of lack of access and government censorship, the Kurds in the autonomous Kurdish region in Northern Iraq often fare far better. Why is the parity in internet access so great between the two regions?
In this week's #IMWeekly: Google's Uproxy, German allegations of US spying, a new direction for Iranian censorship, and more.