Internet Monitor, a project of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University, is delighted to announce the publication of "Beyond the Wall: Mapping Twitter in China," the seventh in a series of special reports that focus on key events and new developments in Internet freedom.
The Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University is pleased to announce the launch of the Internet Monitor dashboard, a freely accessible tool that aims to improve information for policymakers, researchers, advocates, and user communities working to shape the future of the Internet by helping them understand trends in Internet health and activity through data analysis and visualization.
Berkman Center summer intern Elizabeth Gillis dives head-first into Internet Monitor. Her video, "An Intern Explains: Internet Monitor," showcases what she discovers during her exploration.
by Rebekah Heacock Jones
Internet Monitor is delighted to announce the publication of "Arab Religious Skeptics Online: Anonymity, Autonomy, and Discourse in a Hostile Environment," the sixth in a series of special reports that focus on key events and new developments in Internet freedom.
We finish posting our annual report essays on Medium this week with the "Platforms and Policy" collection. The collection contains eleven essays as well as new art by Berkman Center Fellow and Internet Monitor annual report contributor Willow Brugh.
We continue posting our annual report essays on Medium this week with the "Data and Privacy" collection. The collection contains ten of the chapter's eleven essays (Sara Watson's speculative fiction piece, "Dada Data and the Internet of Paternalistic Things," is available elsewhere on Medium) as well as new art by Berkman Center Fellow and Internet Monitor annual report contributor Willow Brugh.
by Rebekah Heacock Jones
The Internet Monitor team is thrilled to announce that, starting this week, we are publishing our 2014 annual report as a series of stories on Medium.
by Rebekah Heacock Jones
The Internet Monitor project's second annual report—Internet Monitor 2014: Reflections on the Digital World—is a collection of roughly three dozen short contributions that highlight and discuss some of the most compelling events and trends in the digitally networked environment over the past year.