Should we be worried about the lack of privacy on the internet? How do you feel, knowing that your movements online are monitored and controlled by outside parties? These issues are important ones, and will help decide the future of the world wide web.
Take for instance the practice of geotargeting, you have probably come across this term online. This is basically the way what you see on a web site depends on the country you are surfing from. For instance, people trying to access the majority of media content on the BBC Iplayer will be blocked if there IP is not registered to the UK, similarly users outside the USA will have no joy connecting to Pandora or Hulu. Your IP address defines what you can access on online, unfortunately we are taking a globally accessible medium and once again segregating people.
Mostly this geotargeting is done because of licenses, although censorship by countries and governments is increasingly happening. Facebook and Youtube are examples of websites that are blocked by many countries. Take Turkey for instance, because of a few videos posted on the video sharing site about Kemal Ataturk, then the whole site got blocked from mainland Turkey.
These sites are meant to be about wide opinions, people posting different views and experiences, but this heavy handed censorship is controlling what people hear, say and do on the internet. Of course there are many more examples of this – China are well known for censoring the internet content to their citizens but did you know that Australia have also an extensive blacklist of sites that get blocked.
Anonymous Internet surfing is partly about protecting your data from the hackers and identity thieves, but it’s also important for protecting our liberty and freedom of speech online!
Tags: anonymous, anonymous surfing, geotargeting