“Even as the U.S. security state becomes more closed, centralized and brittle in the face of NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden’s leaks, civil society and the public are responding to the post-Snowden repression by becoming more dispersed and resilient. That’s how networks always respond to censorship and surveillance. Each new attempt at a file-sharing service, after Napster was shut down — Kazaa, Kazaa lite, eDonkey, eMule, The Pirate Bay — was less dependent on central servers and other vulnerable nodes than the one before it. Wikileaks responded the same way to U.S. government attempts to shut it down.”
Treating Surveillance as Damage and Routing Around It
- Post author:The Freedom Watch Staff
- Post published:August 12, 2013
- Post category:Network Archives
Tags: Bankocracy, CLibertyC, constitutional liberty coalition, Crypto-Anarchism, economic Trends, Essays, for life and liberty, Orwellian, peer to peer, Resistance, sound money, State-Smashing, statism, technology, The Freedom Watch
The Freedom Watch Staff
News before it is news for the resistance from a trusted correspondent.
The Freedom Watch Network
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