Developed by researchers at the University of Toronto and the Munk Centre for International Studies, Psiphon is an open-source software program that enables anyone to access the web in complete ...
A new tool, Psiphon, from a University of Toronto a team of software engineers and computer-hacking activists allows users to bypass internet censorship imposed by countries like China. Psiphon works ...
Tucked near the top of Jadi Mirmirani’s Web browser sits a pale-blue toolbar. Amid a cockpit-like array of buttons, it is his navigation system, but it is entirely nondescript: For Internet activists ...
Psiphon is free to use, doesn't impose a data allowance, and works like a charm when it comes to side-stepping oppressive digital censorship. Still, it's let down by a limited server network and a ...
As Internet censorship continues in countries such as China and Burma, efforts to circumvent it are growing more sophisticated. (See “Burma’s Internet Crackdown.”) Researchers at the Citizen Lab at ...
Steve Hunter wanted to liberate a few oppressed Web users. So, like thousands of other politically conscious technorati, he turned his computer into a “proxy server," a back channel that lets citizens ...