Sunday, May 25, 2025
Peril Of Africa
  • Login
  • Home
  • News
    • Africa
    • Crime
    • Health
  • Politics
  • Opinions
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Africa
    • Crime
    • Health
  • Politics
  • Opinions
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
No Result
View All Result
Peril Of Africa
No Result
View All Result

Dictators Used Sandvine Tech to Censor the Internet. The US Finally Did Something About It

by admin
February 28, 2024
in Technology
Share on FacebookWhatsAppTweetShare

By WIRED

Source link

When the Egyptian government shut down the internet in 2011 to give itself cover to crush a popular protest movement, it was Nora Younis who got the word out. Younis, then a journalist with daily newspaper Al-Masry Al-Youm, found a working internet connection at the InterContinental Cairo Semiramis Hotel that overlooked Tahrir Square, the heart of the protests. From the balcony, she filmed as protesters were shot and run down with armored vehicles, posting the footage to the newspaper’s website, where it was picked up by global media.

In 2016, with Egypt having slid back into the authoritarianism that prompted the uprising, Younis launched her own media platform, Al-Manassa, which combined citizen journalism with investigative reporting. The following year, Almanassa.com suddenly disappeared from the Egyptian internet, along with a handful of other independent publications. It was still available overseas, but domestic users couldn’t see it. Younis’ team moved their site to a new domain. That, too, was rapidly blocked, so they moved again and were blocked again. After three years and more than a dozen migrations to new domains and subdomains, they asked for help from the Swedish digital forensics nonprofit Qurium, which figured out how the blocks were being implemented—using a network management tool provided by a Canadian tech company called Sandvine.

Sandvine is well known in digital rights circles, but unlike leading villains of the spyware world such as NSO Group or Candiru, it’s often floated below the eyeline of lawmakers and regulators. The company, owned by the private equity group Francisco Partners, mainly sells above-board technology to internet service providers and telecom companies to help them run their networks. But it has often sold that technology to regimes that have abused it, using it to censor, shut down, and surveil activists, journalists, and political opponents.

On Monday, after years of lobbying from digital rights activists, the US Department of Commerce added Sandvine to its Entity List, effectively blacklisting it from doing business with American partners. The department said that the company’s technology was “used in mass-web monitoring and censorship” in Egypt, “contrary to the national security and foreign policy interests of the United States.” Digital rights activists say it’s a major victory because it shows that companies can’t avoid responsibility when they sell potentially dangerous products to clients who are likely to abuse them.

“Better late than never,” Tord Lundström, Qurium’s technical director, says. “Sandvine is a shameless example of how technology is not neutral when seeking profit at all costs.”

”We are aware of the action announced by the US Commerce Department, and we’re working closely with government officials to understand, address, and resolve their concerns,” says Sandvine spokesperson Susana Schwartz. “Sandvine solutions help provide a reliable and safe internet, and we take allegations of misuse very seriously.”

Sandvine’s flagship product is deep packet inspection, or DPI, a common tool used by ISPs and telecom companies to monitor traffic and prioritize certain types of content. DPI lets network administrators see what’s in a packet of data flowing on the network in real time, so it can intercept or divert it. It can be used, for example, to give priority to traffic from streaming services over static web pages or downloads, so that users don’t see glitches in their streams. It has been used in some countries to filter out child sexual abuse images.

Related Posts

Apple CEO Tim Cook laughs with President Donald Trump during a meeting in the White House, Washington, March 6, 2019.
Leah Millis | Reuters
Featured

High Price of Tariffs & Isolation – Trump’s Tech Policies Are Bad Economics

May 24, 2025
Despite their immense financial success, MTN and Airtel have consistently failed to provide full transparency in their mobile money services. Image maybe subject to copyright.
Africa

MTN, Airtel: Telecom Giants Exploiting East African Consumers

February 5, 2025
The UCC should focus on making telecom services accessible, affordable, and efficient, not creating hurdles that serve no purpose other than to frustrate and exploit the people.  Image maybe subject to copyright.
Featured

The Uganda Communications Commission’s SIM Card Policy: A Digital Dictatorship

December 10, 2024
Next Post

Stromae - Formidable (ceci n'est pas une leçon)

Discussion about this post

Contacts

Email: [email protected]
Phone: +1 506-871-6371

© 2021 Peril of Africa

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Africa
    • Crime
    • Health
  • Politics
  • Opinions
  • Business
  • Lifestyle

© 2021 Peril of Africa