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Cutting Off #Wisconsin

BY Nancy Scola | Tuesday, February 22 2011

Word is bubbling out of Wisconsin that Defend Wisconsin (DefendWisconsin.org), a site set up by education labor activists, had for a time been inaccessible from the "guest" WiFi network inside the Wisconsin State Capitol Building.

Freelance writer Mike Elk seems to have broken the news on the Center for American Progress's ThinkProgress blog, and CNN.com has confirmation that, indeed, for a period you couldn't get to the site, being used to organize protests of what Republican Governor Scott Walker has planned for what labor unions are able to do, if you were on site in the Capitol. The site was registered by Alexander Hanna, a grad student in sociology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison ("I'm interested in social movements, social media, and the Middle East.") The Wisconsin Department of the Administration says that the site had gotten caught up in an automatic filter that blocks brand-new websites. No matter; the Teacher Assistants Association quickly routed around the blockade by setting up a mirror as a subdomain through a proxy site.

This item gets passed along for two reasons in particular.

One, it's noteworthy that a government entity in the United States would, either by timely choice or somewhat odd long-standing policy, block a website that could be used by political protestors, and that those protestors would quickly scramble to route around that restriction.

Two, how it reads in the month of February in the year 2011 that "a government entity in the United States would...block a website that could be used by political protestors, and that those protestors would quickly scramble to route around that restriction." You can bet that the words "Hosni Mubarak," "dictator," and "cutting off Internet access" pop up in the first sentence of Elk's report.

Over on its Twitter feed, the Defend Wisconsin folks reported about an hour ago that "it looks like defendwisconsin.org is back up on the Capitol wireless network."

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