Egypt Turns Internet Back On For Same Reason It Was Turned Off: To Try To Quell Protests
from the well,-that-worked dept
As has been widely reported today, Egypt has rejoined the internet, after the government told ISPs that it was okay to reconnect to the world nearly a week after it shut off the internet. What's fascinating to me, however, is the basic thinking on both moves. The idea behind shutting down the internet (and mobile phone service) was to try to cut off the ability of protesters to communicate and organize, hoping that it would stifle the protests themselves. Of course, it seemed to only add to the fire, inciting even more anger towards the government, and contributing to even greater numbers of protests. So, now, the reasoning for removing the blocks... is basically the same thing. The government seems to think that letting people back onto the internet will also quell the protests. Perhaps they just shouldn't have turned the internet off in the first place. Either way, this seems like yet another example of governments realizing that it's a lot more difficult to "control" the public than they thought...Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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"Hey we, have a bunch of protests - what can we do about them?"
"Let's try killing the web. Many protesters are using it to communicate. If it works, the protests fail. If it doesn't work, we have protests and a non-functional economy anyway, so there's no loss. Then we can release a conciliatory statement a few days later to show we're making progress and maybe appease a lot of people."
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Re: Re:Conspiracy theorists will wonder if they planned it this way?
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I am not a conspiracy theorist. But I do find it interesting, that as soon as the internet came back on, that pro mubarak types took to the streets and are now clashing with anti-mubarak protesters. The offers of money to anti-mubarak types to change sides rings strange. The whole well orchestrated pro mubarak PR campaign starting 2 hours before hand.
All in all, while I believe in coincidence, I do not trust it.
I will chalk this one up to the leader of a nation using images of two sides clashing to instill fear in an attempt to regain control of the nation he rules. Lets hope he pulls it together and holds on until election time. If he doesn't, like Iran during the revolution you will have 2 years before the next election, and hardliners will more than likely prevail.
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With 5% of the people on the street being pro-mubarak and armed and 95% being basically peaceful and anti-mubarak and the military moving in ... oops end of ... I guess he learned a lot from watching Iran this past year.
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Control... and 'the force'
There only two things to understand about chess tactics:
1) Control
2) The threat of force can be as or more effective than force itself.
Apparently, the leaders in Egypt do not play chess. Or rather, they do not play it well.
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Re: Control... and 'the force'
Chess analogies are good for one thing: commenting on the Internet, not running a country.
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Why the hate?
If Mubarak was replaced by someone, perhaps more extremist, perhaps more antagonistic to Israel, wouldn't that make things worse? Just because a bunch of college kids can't get jobs, does that really mean it is time to destabilize the region?
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Don't be surprised if a new Egyptian government doesn't care too much for our interests. For the longest time, we didn't care about their interests at all.
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Re: Why the hate?
You are certainly not the first one to make that sentiment...
"Somoza may be a son of a bitch, but he's our son of a bitch..." -- President Roosevelt, 1939.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anastasio_Somoza_Garc%C3%ADa#.22Our_son_of_a_bitch.22)
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First, from stable government to stable government took over 2 years.
Second, there were times when the phones work but there was no power or water. There were times when there was water and no phones or power. Then there were times when there was power and no phones or water. Then there were times when there was two of the three. Which two varied, You could walk into a room turn on the lights pick up the phone which would not work and immediately the lights would go out and the phone would work or vice verse. Some times when the phones would work you could out some times not just receive calls. Sometimes you would get a call from the states in the middle of the night and local would not work. Some times you could call the states and not local.
The one and only thing you could count on was there was no logic, no reason, or thought behind what would work when or how.
If you had a plain to leave it may show up today, tomorrow, or next week or never.
You would go to the airport to leave and find a plain had arrived and the place totally completely deserted with no outbound passengers for the plane. You would go to the airport to leave and find the place mobbed and no planes.
The one thing you could not do was assign any logic to anything. Society had completely broken down.
What you have here is much the same thing. There is no logic as society is breaking up.
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Silly question: Was that the state of affairs before the revolution? Was it after the transition to the stable new government? Or was this during the unstable portion of the transition?
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Give it back, and I can sit and watch western entertainment... rocks be damned.
Time to reconnect and become slaves to the 'net and lose interest in anti-social behavior.
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that the internet was turned off in an attempt to disrupt organisation of anti Mubarak protests.
While it may be that it was turned back on, in an attempt to aid the organisation of pro Mubarak protesters
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