#IMWeekly: October 15, 2013
In this week's #IMWeekly: a new move for Internet governance, Brazil's new "secure" e-mail system, and more.
In this week's #IMWeekly: a new move for Internet governance, Brazil's new "secure" e-mail system, and more.
In this week's #IMWeekly: 30-month sentence for Vietnamese blogger Quan, Iranian president Rouhani chats online with Twitter founder Jack Dorsey, 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.
In this week's #IMWeekly: the NSA has broken or circumvented encryption technologies; a new law in Vietnam may prevent most political discussion online.
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.
In this week's #IMWeekly: NSA officials used the agency's surveillance powers to spy on romantic partners; critics challenge Internet.org's mission to bring Internet access to all; and more.
In this week's IM Weekly: Cuban Internet café users must sign pledge not to harm national security before they go online; UK detains the partner of Snowden interviewer Glenn Greenwald; and more.
The problem with modern surveillance is that much more is gathered than can be analyzed. Recent trends in human computing and the use of games to perform complex tasks might fix that problem. In the future, we may all be surveillance analysts.