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  • An internet conference in a surveillance state

    An internet conference in a surveillance state
    Given Azerbaijan's notorious record on censorship, holding the
    Internet Governance Forum in Baku raised some eyebrows.

    http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2012/11/201211139579941937.html
    Last Modified: 13 Nov 2012 13:35


    President Ilham Aliev opted to go to an internet conference on local
    commodities rather than one on world policy [AFP]
    I am in an authoritarian state listening to a panel about human
    rights, at an internet conference without internet access. It is
    November 5, 2012 and I am in Azerbaijan for the Internet Governance
    Forum, an annual conference sponsored by the United Nations to
    encourage dialogue on internet policy issues. This year's IGF takes
    place in the Baku Expo Center, a warehouse-style building on an
    isolated compound on the outskirts of the city. The Center's lack of
    interior walls or ceilings creates an acoustic black hole, rendering
    the stream of policy jargon literally incomprehensible. Delegates
    listen with headphones and speak only with microphones. "We have to
    make sure the voice of the people is heard," says one policy official,
    and the people nod silently, adjusting their headsets for static.

    Numerous commentators have bemoaned the fact that IGF, a conference
    dedicated to participatory dialogue about digital rights, was held in
    Azerbaijan, a country where bloggers are arrested for criticising
    their government. Azerbaijani officials proudly proclaim that they
    have a free internet and that they do not apply the blocks and
    firewalls common in other authoritarian states. This is true, but a
    free internet is of little use to a people who are not free.

    In Azerbaijan, internet users are able to speak their minds, and the
    government is able to monitor them, intimidate them, arrest them, and
    abuse them. At IGF, a delegation of thousands of internet experts from
    around the world got a small taste of how digital media operates in a
    surveillance state. We modified our behaviour, struggled to protect
    our privacy, and relied on rumor in an information void. Incompetence
    became conspiracy, caution turned into paranoia. On IGF's island of
    democracy, separated literally and figuratively from the rest of the
    country, we too succumbed to state control.

    Paranoia, the byproduct of surveillance

    In Azerbaijan, pro-democracy advocates face major challenges
    In the weeks leading up to the conference, delegates to IGF were given
    reminders of what to do when you enter a hostile internet environment:
    Change your passwords, use a VPN (virtual private network), delete
    unnecessary apps, bring a minimum of devices. There are many practical
    steps one can take to increase security. It is the psychological
    effect that is harder to shake.

    For citizens of authoritarian states, the very knowledge that the
    government is listening is enough to curtail free expression.
    Self-censorship is as great a problem for citizens of these states as
    state censorship. The majority of delegates to IGF were foreigners,
    free of the pressures placed on citizens of Azerbaijan, yet they too
    bore the mindset - the most obvious being the search for motive behind
    mismanagement.

    IGF was plagued by a number of technical and organisational problems,
    unusual for a UN conference but notable for how they were perceived in
    an authoritarian context. When the internet went out, as it did
    repeatedly, was it because the government wanted to inhibit our
    speech, or because they failed to allocate enough bandwidth? When the
    Azerbaijani language translator was late, was it because the state
    wanted to shield Azerbaijanis from foreign criticism, or because of
    Baku morning traffic? When the conference organisers neglected to
    provide food, water or coffee, was it because they were disorganised,
    or were they slowly trying to drive hundreds of jetlagged free speech
    advocates insane? (They succeeded.) Such were the conspiracies devised
    and dissected by the IGF delegation, hashed out on hashtags, the
    gossip and innuendo no clearer on the ground than it was online.

    People want to find logic in the actions of authoritarian states, but
    it is the lack of logic, the inconsistency of approach, the arbitrary
    nature of punishment, that gives them their power. It was assumed that
    our communications were monitored, but this was never proven. Several
    delegates reported that their computers were hacked, but had no
    details on who did it or why. Some Azerbaijani activist delegates
    reported being harassed or intimidated upon entrance; others had no
    problems. Evidence is rarely conclusive, and as a result it is hard to
    issue a complaint - not that there is anyone to complain to about
    problems that are said not to exist.

    One prominent Azerbaijani activist told me he had given up trying to
    protect himself, either online or on the ground. He has not changed
    his passwords in years, does not secure his network, and he speaks
    about political issues in public places. There was no point in trying
    to hide, he said, because they are going to watch him anyway. We sat
    in an outdoor cafe and talked about whether he would be jailed again.
    "What are the odds that someone is listening to this conversation?" I
    asked him.

    "I don't know, like 80 percent?" he said, shrugging, and I looked
    around at all the suddenly suspicious people, wondering whether to
    hold back, but I was tired. Self-censorship is exhausting: As regimes
    know, it is easier to shift one's mindset so that there is nothing
    left to censor. Stopping the conversation seemed futile since, like my
    activist friend, I was not saying anything here that I had not said
    publicly. As an American, I had little to lose. For Azerbaijanis
    involved in politics, privacy is only one in a series of losses.

    Authoritarian priorities

    On November 6, 2012, President Ilham Aliev was supposed to address the
    IGF delegation at the opening ceremony. Delegates had received an
    English-language newspaper the day before trumpeting his
    administration's technological prowess. "We see our country in the
    future as one of the world's leading developed countries. Without a
    strong IT-sector it will be impossible to achieve," the paper quoted
    Aliev, next to a picture of him with five phones.

    Aliev came to the Expo Center, but he did not address the IGF.
    Instead, he went next door to the Bakutel conference, an exhibition of
    telecommunications companies of the Caucasus. On November 7, Bakutel
    released a glossy magazine filled with news of the day's events - news
    briefs by business executives, details of Azerbaijan's first
    satellite, and shots of Aliev and his glamorous wife, Mehriban,
    striding down a red carpet into the exhibition hall.

    Aliev had shunned the internet conference on world policy for the
    internet conference on local commodities - a decision emblematic of
    how the internet is perceived by authoritarian regimes. Azerbaijan
    shows how you can have internet freedom without having personal
    freedom, how with access you become accessible. The questions being
    discussed at IGF - surveillance, privacy, ownership, security - were
    not the ones Azerbaijan's government wanted asked, because they have
    already decided the answers. Next door at IGF, we could only argue
    from a distance, isolated and wary, watching ourselves being watched.

    Sarah Kendzior is an anthropologist who recently received her PhD from
    Washington University in St Louis.

    The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not
    necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.

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