#IMWeekly: November 12, 2013
In this week's #IMweekly: attacks by Anonymous-affiliated hackers in the Philippines and Australia, Brazil takes its data domestic, and more!
In this week's #IMweekly: attacks by Anonymous-affiliated hackers in the Philippines and Australia, Brazil takes its data domestic, and more!
A couple weeks ago we tweeted a list by the KANTAR Information is Beautiful Awards of over 300 of the year’s best infographics and data-visualizations. Since then, we’ve been working our way through the list and thought we’d share a few of our personal favorites.
In this week's #IMWeekly: how the NSA hacked the Mexican President's email address, the Moroccan government increases Internet controls, and more.
In this week's #IMWeekly: Sudan under an Internet blackout; arrests under China's new anti-rumor laws; and more.
In this week's IM Weekly: amendments to Bangladesh's IT Act have activists worried; how Brazil's proposed data law might affect privacy; and more.
In this week's #IMWeekly: Vietnamese blogger sentenced to 15 years for defamation, Chinese Weibo users want to "un-verify" their accounts in the face of the country's new anti-rumor policy, and more.
The revelation that several NSA employees have used the agency's surveillance power to spy on romantic partners has sparked a wave of satirical love poems and pick-up lines.
How do internet users use Facebook to gather news and information? It varies widely depending the country.
Snowden’s flight to Hong Kong in late May stirred a wide and active response on the Chinese Internet. Snowden’s name was one of the top-ranked topics on China’s Twitter-like microblogging website Sina Weibo in June.
This week in #imweekly: UK anti-porn filters causes several controversies, Russia threatens to block taboo language online, Australia considers educating citizens in geolocation circumvention, web developers claim the U.S. is requiring master encryption keys and a Texas man is charged with operating a Bitcoin Ponzi scheme.