Global broadcasters need strategies to combat Internet censorship
Broadcasters seeking to deliver online news to countries where blocking is widespread must be prepared to create strategies tailored to those countries, says a new report from the Canada Centre for Global Security Studies at the University of Toronto鈥檚 Munk School of Global Affairs.
The research leading to this conclusion is detailed in a newly released report, Casting a Wider Net: Lessons Learned in Delivering BBC Content on the Censored Internet. The report examines the cat and mouse game of Internet censorship evasion and demonstrates what works, what doesn鈥檛 and why.
鈥淐asting a Wider Net shows that bypassing Internet censorship to deliver news content in restrictive communications environments involves far more than just supplying circumvention tools,鈥 said Ron Deibert, director of the centre and the Citizen Lab at the Munk School of Global Affairs, a group that has designed effective circumvention tools. 鈥淏roadcasters need to devise a strategy for distributing content over the Internet with an understanding of the different challenges they will face in each of the target countries they are trying to reach.鈥
This conclusion is the result of work done by Karl Kathuria, the centre鈥檚 Visiting Fellow in Global Media, and a research team which analysed Internet news traffic in China and Iran. They reviewed two years鈥 worth of traffic data from the BBC鈥檚 web content services, examined in-field testing data from an OpenNet Initiative study of Iranian and Chinese Internet censorship and Psiphon Inc.鈥檚 circumvention service delivery.
鈥淭his project presented us with a unique opportunity to study online distribution in areas where blocking is prevalent, and to consider what is needed for organizations that want to deliver online news on a global scale,鈥 said Kathuria. 鈥淭he recommendations from the report will lead broadcasters into this new delivery environment, helping them to formulate distribution strategies and get closer to their waiting audiences.鈥