အေဳကာင္းအရာသိုႚ ေကဵာ္ဴဖတ္ရန္ ကူးသန္းဳကည့္႟ႁဴခင္းသိုႚ ေကဵာ္ဴဖတ္ရန္
အပိုင္းေတၾ
သီးသန္းပစၤည္းေတၾ
ကူသန္းဳကည့္႟ႁရန္
"ဒီမိုကေရစီ အဓိပၯၝယ္မႀာ . . . . . . ဴပည္သူႛအာဏာ ရႀင္းရႀင္းေလးပဲ။"
"အာဏာသံုးရပ္ လူထုပိုင္ . . . . . . စစ္တပ္နဲႛမဆိုင္ ႓မဲ႓မဲမႀတ္ဳက။"
 
မႀတ္တမ္းမႀတ္ရာ လုပ္ေဆာင္မႁ

Canadian software tool blows away Net censorship, wins global award

Psiphon – designed by the University of Toronto's Citizen Lab –is the first recipient of a new award for digital pioneers chosen by an international group of specialists and awarded in Paris this month.


2/25/2008 5:00:00 AM
by Grant Buckler


Canadian software designed to evade government censorship of the Internet is the first recipient of a new award for digital pioneers chosen by an international group of specialists and awarded in Paris in mid-February.


The University of Toronto's Citizen Lab designed Psiphon for citizens of countries that block access to many Web sites.


Psiphon evades such censorship through an encrypted connection between the user's computer (in the country with Internet censorship) and another piece of software – essentially a Web proxy – on a volunteer's computer in a country where Internet access is not controlled.


Psiphon was chosen from about 100 technology projects from around the world that were nominated for the Netxplorateur of the Year Grand Prix award.


Former French Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin presented the award to Ronald Deibert, a University of Toronto professor and director of the Citizen Lab, and Michael Hull, head of spinoff company Psiphon Inc., at a Paris ceremony in mid-February.


An international network of specialists chose the initial list of 100 projects considered to be “concrete and innovative at the same time, but also loaded with meaning,” according to Ingrid Brégeon-Fall, a spokeswoman for the awards.


This was narrowed to a short list of 10 Netxplorateurs of the Year, from which the Citizen Lab was chosen the Grand Prix winner.


This is the first year the prize has been given, Brégeon-Fall says. There is no cash award associated with the prize.


The Citizen Lab has been researching Internet censorship for several years, Deibert says.


It has seen a gradual growth in the number of countries practicing it, from only two or three in 2002 to 26 countries where there was some evidence of sites being blocked in 2006.


The six countries that censor Internet access the most are China, Myanmar (Burma), Vietnam, Tunisia, Iran and Uzbekistan, Diebert says.


Danny O'Brien, international outreach co-ordinator at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a non-profit group concerned with Internet freedom, describes net censorship as “a growing problem.”


That's due partly to the advance of filtering technologies, he says. “More and more countries are finding ways to do fine-grained censorship of the Internet.”


O'Brien says that is fueling a technology arms race between censors and groups like the Citizen Lab.


Citizen Lab senior researchers came up with the concept of Psiphon in 2004, Diebert says.


According to the Citizen Lab, Psiphon's design makes it virtually impossible to detect and block.


A computer user with unrestricted Internet access can download and install a small Psiphon application from the Web site at the Psiphon Web site.


They then give the unique connection information for this node to a friend or relative in a country with restricted access.


Source : IT Business, Canadian Technology News


ရံ သုံး ရံ


ငၝတုိႛအားလုံး ဝုိင္းလုိႛရံ
အဲန္အယ္(လ္)ဒီကုိ ဦးထိပ္ပန္၊

ငၝတုိႛအားလုံး ညီတဲ့အသံ
လၿတ္ေတာ္ေခၞရန္ ဝုိင္းလုိႛရံ၊

ငၝတုိႛအားလုံး တေယာက္မကဵန္
ေဒၞေအာင္ဆန္းစုဳကည္ကုိ ဝုိင္းလုိႛရံ၊

တုိႛေတၾညီညာ ဝုိင္းရံမႀ
ဴမန္ဴပည္သာယာ ေအးမည္ပ။

(သတင္းစာ ဆရာ႒ကီး 'ဟံသာဝတီ ဦးဝင္းတင္' ၏ "ရံသုံးရံ" အဆုိအမိန္ႛကုိ ကဗဵာအေနဴဖင့္ သီကုံး ေရးဖၾဲႚ တင္ဴပပၝသည္။)

ရန္ႎုိင္ထၾန္း
လၾတ္ေဴမာက္နယ္ေဴမ၊ ကုိရီးယား
 

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