The Egyptian government has apparently cut the access of its citizens to the Internet in response to many protests.
In a move that observers see as unprecedented government closed the connection to the Internet to all international organizations, monitor web Renesys said in a blog post. Renesys CTO James Cowie said that almost all the Internet addresses of Egypt were not available worldwide.
He said: "Every Egyptian supplier, company, bank, Internet cafe, website, school, diplomatic and government district offices, which are based on four of their Egyptian ISP connectivity Internet now cut off from the rest of the world. "
It seems that Egyptian authorities were closing the country's DNS servers. Obviously, Tunisia shocked by what happened in, cutting the government sees the Internet, in fact, hang up demonstrators.
The Egyptian government, action could be turned against. The protesters are still working on more ways again, all this brings even more emphasis on a system that previously has said he supports freedom of expression.
As Cowie says, Egypt's actions had "substantially reimbursed for their country on the world map."
These developments show how the web is now, with protesters often using communication channels such as Facebook and Twitter. μ
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