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Cyber-Rebels in Cuba Defy State’s Limits

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robcon Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-06-08 10:41 AM
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Cyber-Rebels in Cuba Defy State’s Limits
From NY Times, the storu of the continuing attempts to keep information out of the hands of the Cuban people, like we've seen with the Iranian people. It might be a great time for Raoul Castro to stand down from the gulag. Let's hope so.

"A growing underground network of young people armed with computer memory sticks, digital cameras and clandestine Internet hookups has been mounting some challenges to the Cuban government in recent months, spreading news that the official state media try to suppress.

Last month, students at a prestigious computer science university videotaped an ugly confrontation they had with Ricardo Alarcón, the president of the National Assembly. Mr. Alarcón seemed flummoxed when students grilled him on why they could not travel abroad, stay at hotels, earn better wages or use search engines like Google. The video spread like wildfire through Havana, passed from person to person, and seriously damaged Mr. Alarcón’s reputation in some circles.

Something similar happened in late January when officials tried to impose a tax on the tips and wages of employees of foreign companies. Workers erupted in jeers and shouts when told about the new tax, a moment caught on a cellphone camera and passed along by memory sticks...

...Hidden in a small room in the depths of the Capitol building, the state-owned cafe charges a third of the average Cuban’s monthly salary — about $5 — to use a computer for an hour. The other two former Internet cafes in central Havana have been converted into “postal services” that let Cubans send e-mail messages over a closed network on the island with no links to the Internet.

“It’s a sort of telegraph service,” said one young man, shrugging as he waited in line to use the computers at a former Internet cafe on O’Reilly Street.

Yet the government’s attempts to control access are increasingly ineffective. Young people here say there is a thriving black market giving thousands of people an underground connection to the world outside the Communist country..."
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Richard Steele Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-06-08 10:45 AM
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1. Interesting stuff. K&R
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