Finding bloggers, pirates
The Tunisian government, not content to simply grab account information and delete the offending material, also began hauling bloggers into police custody

On January 7, Reporters Without Borders had at least five confirmed cases of bloggers and online activists being arrested. Here’s one:

Four or five police plainclothes officers arrested the blogger and activist Hamadi Kaloutcha at his home at around 6 am, seizing a computer and a central processing unit. They told his wife they were taking him to the nearest police station and “just have a few questions for him,” and “that will only take a few hours.” There has been no news of him since.

Several of those arrested, including Kaloutcha, were members of the Pirate Party of Tunisia; the Pirate Party U.K. later issued several statements deploring the disappearances.

“Pirate Parties around the world condemn these acts against freedom of expression, human rights and democracy, and call upon governments take firm action against Tunisia for these recent events,” one said. A later note said that one detainee had been beaten, and it said that several of the bloggers were accused of “degradation of state property on account of anonymous DDoS attacks.”

Immediately related elementsHow this works
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Technology: Oppressor or liberator? »Technology: Oppressor or liberator?
Country Case Studies »Country Case Studies
Revolutions in the Arab world »Revolutions in the Arab world
Tunisia »Tunisia
Internet freedom in Tunisia? »Internet freedom in Tunisia?
Intensified censorship and control during the recent crisis »Intensified censorship and control during the recent crisis
Finding bloggers, pirates
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