CYCRNIFeb 14, 2014

Censorship in the Wild: Analyzing Internet Filtering in Syria

arXiv:1402.3401v54 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This provides the first detailed analysis of internet filtering in Syria, addressing a gap in understanding censorship practices for researchers and policymakers.

The paper tackled the problem of analyzing real-world internet censorship by studying 600GB of leaked proxy logs from Syria, revealing targeted filtering methods including IP/domain blocking and keyword-based censorship with collateral damage, and showing that users employ evasion techniques like Tor and VPNs.

Internet censorship is enforced by numerous governments worldwide, however, due to the lack of publicly available information, as well as the inherent risks of performing active measurements, it is often hard for the research community to investigate censorship practices in the wild. Thus, the leak of 600GB worth of logs from 7 Blue Coat SG-9000 proxies, deployed in Syria to filter Internet traffic at a country scale, represents a unique opportunity to provide a detailed snapshot of a real-world censorship ecosystem. This paper presents the methodology and the results of a measurement analysis of the leaked Blue Coat logs, revealing a relatively stealthy, yet quite targeted, censorship. We find that traffic is filtered in several ways: using IP addresses and domain names to block subnets or websites, and keywords or categories to target specific content. We show that keyword-based censorship produces some collateral damage as many requests are blocked even if they do not relate to sensitive content. We also discover that Instant Messaging is heavily censored, while filtering of social media is limited to specific pages. Finally, we show that Syrian users try to evade censorship by using web/socks proxies, Tor, VPNs, and BitTorrent. To the best of our knowledge, our work provides the first analytical look into Internet filtering in Syria.

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