Global Internet Freedom Consortium
The Global Internet Freedom Consortium is a consortium of organizations that develop and deploy anti-censorship technologies for use by Internet users in countries whose governments restrict Web-based information access. The organization was reportedly begun in 2001 by Chinese-born scientists living in the United States reacting against Chinese government oppression of the Falun Gong.
Products
The main products are Freegate and Ultrasurf.
Funding
The organization states that the majority of its funding comes from its members. In May 2010, the group was offered a $1.5 million (USD) grant from the United States Department of State.[1] This move received criticism from representatives of the Chinese government.[2]
See also
- Human rights in the People's Republic of China
- Internet censorship
- Internet censorship in the People's Republic of China
- Political repression of cyber-dissidents
References
External links
- Global Internet Freedom Consortium
- v
- t
- e
Censorship
- Books
- Films
- Internet
- circumvention
- Music
- Postal
- Press
- Radio
- Speech and expression
- Student media
- Thought
- Video games
- Bleeping
- Book burning
- Broadcast delay
- Censor bars
- Chilling effect
- Collateral censorship
- Concision
- Conspiracy of silence
- Content-control software
- Damnatio memoriae
- Euphemism
- Expurgation
- Fogging
- Gag order
- Heckling
- Heckler's veto
- Internet police
- Memory hole
- National intranet
- Newspaper theft
- Pixelization
- Prior restraint
- Propaganda
- Purge
- Revisionism
- Sanitization
- Self-censorship
- Speech code
- Strategic lawsuit
- Surveillance
- Whitewashing
- Word filtering