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New Media and Social Change in Rural EgyptIcon indicating an associated article is peer reviewedIcon indicating an associated article is new

New Media and Social Change in Rural Egypt

 Dr Sahar Khamis goes back to Kafr Masoud in the Nile Delta after ten years and notes the effects of exposure to satellite television channels, the Internet and mobile phones, with particular attention to how they have changed the lives and perceptions of rural women.

The Unlikely Young Cosmopolitans of CairoIcon indicating an associated article is new

The Unlikely Young Cosmopolitans of Cairo

 Heba Elsayed argues that young members of Cairo's lower middle classes, because of their ability to negotiate for themselves a heterogeneous cosmopolitanism dependent upon local repertoires yet also drawing on global discourses, are more deserving of the cosmopolitan label than their upper-class counterparts.

Saintly Soap Operas: An examination of three Coptic saint dramasIcon indicating an associated article is new

Saintly Soap Operas: An examination of three Coptic saint dramas

 Omar Foda looks at the video hagiographies of three Coptic saints and finds that this little-studied genre draws heavily on the tropes of the Egyptian musalsal, including very colloquial Arabic language and exclusive use of melodrama in the presentation of emotions

News Consumption among Young Libyan AdultsIcon indicating an associated article is new

News Consumption among Young Libyan Adults

 Mokhtar Elareshi and Barrie Gunter present the findings of a survey on the television news viewing habits of Libyan students. The survey confirms that pan-Arab television stations are their favorite choice, displacing the local alternatives.

Privileging the Private: Media and Development in SyriaIcon indicating an associated article is new

Privileging the Private: Media and Development in Syria

 Leah Caldwell examines coverage of 'development' by the privately owned Syrian daily al-Watan and finds that it is always discussed in a tightly controlled framework where a handful of participants are allowed to participate and determine exactly what or who needs to be developed.




 

Digital Shahid - From Broadcast Media to Citizen Journalism in PalestineIcon indicating an associated article is new

Digital Shahid - From Broadcast Media to Citizen Journalism in Palestine

 Gianluca Iazzolina traces developments in Palestinian media from the partisan-dominated 1990s to the more diverse forms of the 21st century. He concludes that information technologies are helping to bridge the gap between Israeli and Palestinian civil societies, allowing them to mirror each other in their most human dimension.




 

Cloud Computing and the Monolithic NarrativeIcon indicating an associated article is new

Cloud Computing and the Monolithic Narrative

 Rami Khater discusses the implications of automated translation based on cloud computing and warns that the subaltern’s narrative and voice could be removed from the interpretation of all human history if our collective knowledge passes through the filters of these trained algorithms.

Catch & Release: Evaluating the Free Kareem CampaignIcon indicating an associated article is new

Catch & Release: Evaluating the Free Kareem Campaign

Courtney C. Radsch argues on the basis of the Kareem Amer case that although cyberactivists and rights organizations are capable of sustained campaigns in defense of freedom of expression, some governments at least are almost impervious to the pressure, even at the cost of significant damage to their international image.

Syrian Dabke Meets Western MediaIcon indicating an associated article is new

Syrian Dabke Meets Western Media

 Leah Caldwell examines Western coverage of the Syrian music and art scene, focusing on the case of dabke musician Omar Souleyman, and says some of the coverage perpetuates the idea that without a Western seal of authenticity on a particular art form, its cultural value is significantly diminished.

Digital Protectionism: Preparing for the coming Internet EmbargoIcon indicating an associated article is new

Rami Khater sees the first signs that the United States and its allies might use their dominance of the Internet as a weapon against their enemies in the Middle East and argues that countries in the region would do well to develop indigenous Internet platforms.




 

Arab Media Wire

Facebook Enables HTTPS Facebook announced that they’re rolling out HTTPS to users across the site. In light of recent developments, from the Tunisian government phishing of accounts to the availability of Firesheep, this is a major step in the right direction for protecting Facebook users.
Twitter confirms it is blocked in Egypt Twitter confirmed on Tuesday the Internet messaging and communications site had been blocked in Egypt, where thousands of people have taken to the streets to protest President Hosni Mubarak's 30-year rule.
‘Palestine Papers’ fallout: Fatah protesters attack Al Jazeera while in Gaza ‘anger and disbelief’ Protesters broke into al-Jazeera's offices in Ramallah earlier today chanting "Al Jazeera are traitors" and "don't film."
The Inside Story of How Facebook Responded to Tunisian Hacks ... It was on Christmas Day that Facebook's Chief Security Officer Joe Sullivan first noticed strange things going on in Tunisia. Reports started to trickle in that political-protest pages were being hacked. "We were getting anecdotal reports saying, 'It looks like someone logged into my account and deleted it,'" Sullivan said. For Tunisians, it was another run-in with Ammar, the nickname they've given to the authorities that censor the country's Internet. They'd come to expect it.
Palestinian Authority outraged by Al Jazeera document leak A senior Palestinian Authority official in Ramallah strongly condemned Al- Jazeera TV network on Sunday for releasing hundreds of documents concerning the peace talks between Palestinians and Israelis. “Al- azeera has declared war on the Palestinians,” the official told The Jerusalem Post. “This station serves the interests of the enemies of the Palestinians.”
Al Jazeera's introduction to the Palestine Papers Over the last several months, Al Jazeera has been given unhindered access to the largest-ever leak of confidential documents related to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. There are nearly 1,700 files, thousands of pages of diplomatic correspondence detailing the inner workings of the Israeli-Palestinian peace process. These documents – memos, e-mails, maps, minutes from private meetings, accounts of high level exchanges, strategy papers and even power point presentations – date from 1999 to 2010.
Al Jazeera reveals confidential documents on Israeli-Palestinian talks The Palestine Papers reveal that Israel had no reason to halt construction in Ramat Shlomo. That’s because Palestinian negotiators agreed in 2008 to allow Israel to annex this settlement, along with almost every other bit of illegal construction in the Jerusalem area – an historic concession for which they received nothing in return.
Government of Tunisia Shuts Down Popular TV Channel Tunisia’s interim government abruptly shut down the country’s oldest and most popular private television network on Sunday evening, in an apparent violation of its pledges to respect freedom of expression after the ouster of authoritarian president Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali.The state news agency said the government had arrested the network’s owner and stopped its broadcast for “grand treason,” charging that the network was trying “to abort the youth’s revolution, spread confusion, incite strife and broadcast false information likely to create a constitutional vacuum and destabilize the country in order to take it into a spiral of violence that aims to restore the dictatorship of the former president,” according to a government statement.

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