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lmost simultaneously, about 3,500 individual Border Gateway Protocol routes – the paths systems use to communicate across the global internet – were withdrawn on orders from the Egyptian government, cutting the country off from the rest of the world and bringing internal communication to a halt. For five days, 93 percent of Egyptian networks remained completely unreachable.1
The internet shutdown in Egypt, brought on by a series of anti-government protests that had begun three days earlier, was not the first instance of government manipulation of the web.
The previous year, Tunisia significantly ramped up its already aggressive blocking of specific websites in response to unrest that would ultimately unseat its government.2 In 2009, Iran, facing protests against the disputed victory of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in that year’s presidential election, slowed the internet to a crawl.3 And in 2007, Guinean President Lansana Conté mandated the first widely known blackout, shutting down the fledgling internet industry in a nation where less than 1 percent of the population had access at all.45 But never before had an entire country, one where more than a quarter of the population was connected to the internet, simply severed itself from the open web.6
The Egyptian government’s actions, spotlighting a long-ignored risk, immediately reverberated across the world.
“Since we began tracking government-initiated internet shutdowns, their use has proliferated at a truly alarming pace.”
– Felicia Anthonio, campaigner and #KeepItOn lead at Access Now
The international backlash was swift and forceful. In the United States, a long-touted bill that would grant the president emergency powers to shut off the internet died in the Senate amid the public uproar without ever receiving a vote.7 Leaders in Germany, Austria, Australia, and the European Parliament, meanwhile, were compelled to assure the public that they would never seek the authority to shut down the internet within their borders.891011
In the years since, internet shutdowns have been condemned as a violation of human rights by the United Nations, the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights, the Organization of American States, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, the Freedom Online Coalition, and a host of other international organizations and NGOs.1213
But even as international condemnation has mounted in the years since 2011, the number of shutdowns – intentional disruptions of internet-based communications by state actors – has grown exponentially, exploding from just a handful in 2012 to at least 213 across 33 countries in 2019.1415 In 2020, even as the total number of shutdowns ticked down slightly due to delayed elections and global stay-at-home orders driven by the COVID-19 pandemic, the total duration of internet shutdowns worldwide jumped 49 percent.16
“Since we began tracking government-initiated internet shutdowns, their use has proliferated at a truly alarming pace,” explains Felicia Anthonio, Campaigner and #KeepItOn Lead at Access Now, a global human rights organization that works to defend and extend the digital rights of people around the world and has been tracking internet shutdowns since 2016. “As governments across the globe learn this authoritarian tactic from each other, it has moved from the fringes to become a common method many authorities use to stifle opposition, quash free speech and muzzle expression.”