2/19/2026 at 9:34:31 PM
I just chaired a session at the FOCI conference earlier today, where people were talking about Internet censorship circumvention technologies and how to prevent governments from blocking them. I'd like to remind everyone that the U.S. government has been one the largest funders of that research for decades. Some of it is under USAGM (formerly BBG, the parent of RFE/RL)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Agency_for_Globa...
and some of it has been under the State Department, partly pursuant to the global Internet freedom program introduced by Hillary Clinton in 2010 when she was Secretary of State.
I'm sure the political and diplomatic valence is very different here, but the concept of "the U.S. government paying to stop foreign governments from censoring the Internet" is a longstanding one.
by schoen
2/19/2026 at 9:38:14 PM
It goes deeper than that. The U.S. Government funds it, discourages other nations from using it, and spies on all web traffic as a result of it.Almost 80% of communications go through a data center in Northern VA. Within a quick drive to Langley, Quantico, DC, and other places that house three letter agencies I’m not authorized to disclose.
by reactordev
2/19/2026 at 10:01:52 PM
Speed of light establishes certain latency minima. Experimental data can falsify (or not) at geographical locations far enough from VA.by recursive
2/19/2026 at 10:13:54 PM
Correct but local governments using Palantir will need to provide it to them somehow.by reactordev
2/19/2026 at 9:39:08 PM
It’s a clear way to project soft power: make sure your message and culture can get through.by Waterluvian
2/19/2026 at 9:57:01 PM
This is exactly right. TikTok is a great example. Rather than let the CCP take control over people and remove freedom from the internet, we have taken over and opened the platform up to free expression without communist strictures or interference. The are numerous examples, from Apple to Microsoft.by learingsci
2/19/2026 at 10:26:14 PM
Shortly after the American version of TikTok was established in January of 2026, users began reporting that certain content was creating error messages, including using words like "Epstein" in direct messages, which news outlet CNBC was able to replicate and confirm, with the error message reading: "This message may be in violation of our Community Guidelines, and has not been sent to protect our community." Other users reported similar messages for content critical of U.S. President Donald Trump or other topics.by mossTechnician
2/19/2026 at 10:08:03 PM
Can you be more specific?by motbus3