ISPs in Iran, Tunisia also use SmartFilter (which blocks BoingBoing as “nudity”)

POSTED BY admin, February 27, 2006 – 5:07 pm | PERMALINK


Snip from a June, 2005 post on the Global Voices blog, about a report issued last year by The OpenNet Initiative and Berkman CenterInternet Filtering in Iran (PDF). Snip from executive summary (PDF):

Iran is also one of a growing number of countries, particularly in the Middle East region, that rely upon commercial software developed by for-profit United States companies to carry out the core of its filtering regime. Iran has recently acknowledged, as our testing confirms, that it uses the commercial filtering package SmartFilter – made by the US-based company, Secure Computing – as the primary technical engine of its filtering system. This commercial software product is configured as part of the Iranian filtering system to block both internationally-hosted sites in English and sites in local languages.

SmartFilter, as with all commercial filtering software packages, is prone to over-blocking, errors, and a near-total lack of transparency. In effect, Iran outsources many of the decisions for what its citizens can access on the Internet to a United States company, which in turn profits from its complicity in such a regime.

In the comments thread on that post, former Secure Computing Public Relations Manager David Burt claims the copies of Smartfilter used by Iran’s government-controlled ISPs were not licensed:

Secure Computing has sold no licenses to any entity in Iran, and any use of Secure’s software by an ISP in Iran has been without Secure Computing’s consent and is in violation of Secure Computing’s End User License Agreement. We have been made aware of ISPs in Iran making illegal and unauthorized attempts to use of our software.

But on Yishay Mor’s blog, Mr. Burt appeared to confirm that Secure Computing sells its censorware products to a government-controlled ISP in Tunisia, and anywhere else that such a transaction would not be prohibited by US law:

We sell to ISPs where the law allows. It’s really up the customer how they use our software.

Previously:
* BoingBoing banned in UAE, Qatar, elsewhere. Our response to net-censors: Get bent!
* Stick Michelangelo’s “David” on your blog to protest censorware

Image: A “block page” from Iran’s ISP DATAK, from Blockpage.com, received when attempting to access a pregnancy information website. “Headers indicate that the ISP is using Cisco’s PIX firewall to filter in conjunction with Smartfilter. Pornography is blocked, as are political sites.” Link

Reader comment: Mongo Nikol says,

Here’s a letter from James S. Tyre, co-founder of the Censorware Project (and long-time EFF ally) sent in ’99 to Senator John McClaine. It seems SmartFilter not only blocks nudity but it also filters out the Declaration of Independence, the US Constitution, the Bible, the Koran, and all the works of Shakespeare. Perhaps SmartFilter believes kids should be protected from these works, also?

Reader comment: Peggy says,

A 2002 survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that SmartFilter blocks a number of health-related sites. As you might expect, web sites with sex ed, birth control and sexually transmitted disease information were on the block list. It surprised me, though, that SmartFilter blocks the CDC site about diabetes. Of course it isn’t just SmartFilter that blocks these sites – other internet filtering programs such as CyberPatrol and Websense are guilty of this as well. Link.

Reader comment: Moe’s Diner says,

I used to work with an organization associated with a minority religion outside the mainstream big-5 (or big-7)–one of those hundreds of “other” philosophies that never was about social conformity or political success. So, I found out at the time that SmartFilter tends to lump the websites of *all* minority philosophies under the “cult” category. And, of course, most organizations opt-in to block “cults” (maybe it’s part of the SmartFilter’s defualt config?). Anyway, as you can imagine, the world is now a much safer place that people can’t access unpopular philosophical ideas–you know, since, in general, all good ideas have always been popular and embraced by the mainstream.

Reader comment: Christopher Lotito says,

Campaign Against Smartfilter Directly! This page at the Secure Computing website allows you to check the blacklist status of your favorite URLs, then provide recommendations to change their categorization. The company promises to email you eventually and there is even a place to put comments. Since Secure Computing is located in San Jose in the United States… a place some may recall as a bastion of freedom and democracy, it seems appropriate that Secure Computing should enjoy a demonstration of that deomcratic proccess. I hope that all BoingBoing readers will take a couple minutes to cast their vote to have BoingBoing removed from the blacklist using this Secure Computing approved and even preferred method. Good Luck BoingBoing, I’ll be keeping up on this issue and I hope you’ll let me know if there are any other ways that I can help.

Reader comment: “Open Source Sex Ed” blogger, author, podcaster, and Fleshbot contributor Violet Blue says,

I personally really need the “Defeat Censorware” resource you’re providing to get
around stoopid filterware for my livelihood. I’ve often ended
up in places hunting for wi-fi because I need to work, only
to discover that I can’t access my website or or Fleshbot.com at places like
the local Sony Metreon shopping center — not even the Movable Type blog-editing interfaces. I wonder how many
other journalists and bloggers find themselves in the same fix?

Reader comment: Darin Dykes of ARRL.net says,

QRZ.com is an amateur radio site related to news, discussion, and buying and selling of ham radio related gear. While discussions can get quite animated, they don’t merit the “Entertainment” block it received from SmartFilter. And qsl.net is a domain set up by ham radio operators for ham radio operators. It generally does not allow any content that you couldn’t utilize via amateur radio. SmartFilter blocked the entire domain of thousands of ham radio operator sites and classed it as “Entertainment.” How they got that I don’t know. I work on a USAF base so BoingBoing is no longer accessible.



Microwaved penis in Pittsburgh turns out to be sex toy Whizzinator

POSTED BY admin, February 24, 2006 – 1:54 pm | PERMALINK

The severed penis a gas station clerk spotted in a microwave turned out to be a pee-filled sex toy gadget for drug test evasion.

A couple entered the GetGo station in the 200 block of Fifth Avenue about 5:10 p.m., and the man asked a female store clerk to heat in the microwave an object wrapped in a paper towel.

Police Chief Joseph Pero said the clerk complied but noticed a strange odor. When she handed the object back to the man, it became unwrapped and she saw what resembled a penis. The couple left the store separately, and the clerk called 911.

Chief Pero said the woman who was in the store contacted police this morning and said the object was a sex toy filled with urine. Chief Pero said she explained it needed to be heated to body temperature for use in an employment drug screen she needed to take.

Link to Pittsburgh Post-Gazette story. (thanks, Patrick Hillman)

Reader comment: The lovely and knowledgeable Violet Blue corrects press coverage of the incident, and schools Boing Boing:

What’s happened here is that they’ve confused the Whizzinator (or maybe Urinator) with a sex toy (ew), and one quick look at the site lets you know that these are not sex toys, but gadgets specifically maufactured for pasisng drug tests — they even come in a variety of “flesh” tones (that is, if you’re Barbie).

Link. There’s also the Ejaculator, but it’s not made to hold enough liquid for a urine test: Link.



Vintage mink Olympic penis-cozy for sale on eBay

POSTED BY admin, February 14, 2006 – 8:03 am | PERMALINK

All you need to know: “THE JETSTREAM DELUXE FUR PENISMUFFLER 100% REAL MINK, HANDMADE BY PROMINENT NYC FURRIER IN THE 1960’S, NEW & NEVER USED. SELECTED BY THE US SKIING OLYMPIC COMMITTEE (SEE PICS).” Link. (Thanks, Violet Blue!)



Electronic Musical instruments from 1970 to 1990

POSTED BY admin, February 6, 2006 – 11:13 am | PERMALINK

On obsolete.com, a comprehensive history of 120 years in electronic music machines. Shown here: Elisha Gray’s Musical Telegraph of 1876.

Gray accidentally dicovered that he could control sound from a self vibrating electromagnetic circuit and in doing so invented a basic single note oscillator. The ‘Musical Telegraph’ used steel reeds whose oscillations were created and transmitted , over a telephone line, by electromagnets. Gray also built a simple loudspeaker device in later models consisting of a vibrating diaphragm in a magnetic field to make the oscillator audible. (…)

Elisha Gray’s first “musical telegraph” or “harmonic telegraph” contained enough single-tone oscillators to play two octaves and later models were equipped with a simple tone wheel control. Gray took the instrument on tour with him in 1874. Alexander Graham Bell also designed an experimental ‘ Electric Harp’ for speach transmission over a telephone line using similar technology to Gray’s.

Link (Thanks, Violet Blue)



Found in Korea: “Brack Power” condoms. “Piece! Respect!”

POSTED BY admin, February 5, 2006 – 9:32 am | PERMALINK


While traveling in South Korea, Boing Boing reader Newley Purnell happened upon a box of black-colored condoms in a Seoul shop. The copy on the box reads, “Keep it real. Keep on faith. Keep on going. Piece! Stay real! We are all brack people.” Link to one photo, and here’s another. “There’s so much to analyze that I don’t even know where to start,” says Newley.

Incidentally, french-fry-encrusted corn dogs appear to be popular over there.

Update: As weird as “Brack Power Condoms” are, this could have been weirder: Brak condoms, anyone? They go nice with Space Ghost edible underwear. Also Brak is in it. (Thanks, Mike Outmesguine and Violet Blue)

Reader comment: Jonathan Davis says,

These condoms are actually Japanese, not Korean. That said, you can get them at the Costco in Seoul. But then you have to buy them by the four-pack.

It sort of kills me that they made it onto your site, because I have a long history with the brand. i spent hours trying to and finally taking a good picture of the box to send to engrish.com. But that was more than a year ago and i never heard back from them. then i found them again at Costco a few weeks ago and bought eight packs so I could send a bunch to Viceland and win a free year’s worth of the magazine. But now that the brand has been on your site it’s less of a “find” and more of a repeat.

The worst part of it is that I ended up getting snaked by some dude who was here for a short time. I’ve been in Korea since 1999. I’m sure there is a life lesson in here somewhere, but I’m afraid to look.

ps. be careful. the “chips around the hot dog on a stick” routine is a great way to give yourself an oil burn in the shape of a goatee.



What would you do with one hundred 99-cent dildos?

POSTED BY admin, February 3, 2006 – 3:54 pm | PERMALINK


Greg Nog says,

Back in August, you had a link to an Amazon sale on less-than-a-dollar sex toys (Link). Upon following the link, I did the only thing any upstanding young man would have done: I bought 100 of them, and gave them to my roommate for Christmas. Now, he’s trying to figure out what to do with them.

Link, and “submit your non-sexual, non-destructive ideas” here.

Correction: Violet Blue says,

Except those aren’t dildos, they’re vibrators. Amateurs! And since they’re vibrators, the Power Tool Drag Races, naturally…



YASGL (Yet Another Sexy Geeks List for 2005)

POSTED BY admin, December 27, 2005 – 7:44 am | PERMALINK

Wired News has compiled a list of carbon-based lifeforms who tip the hot-ometer reading to “circuit overload.” This list of 2005’s top ten sexiest geeks includes podcaster Violet Blue, publisher Nick Denton, and — my heart be still! — “Judge John Jones III, because talking intelligently about intelligent design is very hot.” Link.

Previously on Boing Boing: Top Ten Sexiest Geeks for 2005


Dirty holiday podcast from Violet Blue

POSTED BY admin, December 25, 2005 – 9:59 am | PERMALINK

Not so much a war on Christmas, as subversion from within. 30 MB of “hot holiday smut” in this week’s edition of author and blogger Violet Blue’s “Open Source Sex” podcast. Details, and download link. NSFW, sexually explicit.


Tribe.net pre-emptively censors groups in fear of fed 2257 law

POSTED BY admin, December 22, 2005 – 11:58 am | PERMALINK


Over at Fleshbot, Violet Blue writes,

Once upon a time there were plenty of reasons to visit social networking site Tribe.net, even if you weren’t a member; the online community fostered groups with open dialogues about sex and culture and created resources for MILF fans, armpit fetishists, and cocksucking enthusiasts that everyone could enjoy.

But in a sad turn of events yesterday, Tribe has voluntarily applied 2257 record-keeping requirements across the board for all users and groups in its architecture, thus removing a lot of worthwhile content and making group leaders like me feel more like the headmistress at a very bad boys’ school … and not in the way I’d like.

Link to full text of post with pointers to background stories, and there’s more on Violet’s blog here.

Snip from a related post on SFist:

The very definition of a ‘chilling effect’ on free speech is when legislation or enforcement of new laws are so potentially onerous that people and organization self-censor out of fear and potential liability. Today, the users of Tribe.net were one of the first groups on the internet to feel that cool breeze, as Tribe have instituted their new Terms of Use with amendments to the provisions regarding mature public content, and presumably, any content deemed offensive by a Tribe user.

Of course, you know who to thank, ultimately. The changes to the obscenity code recommend by Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez and recently passed into law have jurisdiction over a wide range of potential content, as the Supreme Court has defined ‘community standards of decency’ the ultimate standard in an obscenity hearing. While Tribe.net has a strong local user base, and naturally our standards of decency here in the Bay Area are rather tolerant, this opens up the potential for a user in the flyover states to deem content produced here obscene, since they can access it from anywhere in the world. Blogger and EFF attorney Jason Schultz explains:

What happened at Tribe is what we can expect in a world where the FBI dictates the terms of what freedom of expression means. It’s disappointing that Tribe overreacted like it did and banned far more speech than necessary, but one also has to realize, in a world where you can go to jail for what you help publish on the Internet, there’s a serious chilling effect from laws like 2257.

Link.

Previous posts on Boing Boing related to 2257 (Link) and Tribe.net’s self-censorship (Link). Image: Jacob Appelbaum.


Violet Blue’s Top Ten Sexiest Geeks of 2005

POSTED BY admin, December 21, 2005 – 10:32 am | PERMALINK

Multimediatrix and sex educator Violet Blue has posted her list of “Top Ten Sexiest Geeks of 2005.” Quite a few BoingBoing pals and people whose names are familiar to BB readers made the list. How exciting! Ken Goldberg, Jacob Appelbaum, and Irene McGee were among the runners-up. And the top 10 included riot nrrds Annalee Newitz, Eddie Codel, and Jason Schlutz. Violet’s number one hot geek? Xeni Jardin! Link