Author Archives: Christopher

About Christopher

Christopher is a PhD candidate in the Department of Political Science at the University of Victoria. He is currently attending to a particular set of technologies that facilitate digitally mediated surveillance, including Deep Packet Inspection (DPI), behavioral advertising, and mobile devices. He thinks through how these technologies influence citizens in their decision to openly express themselves or engage in self-censoring behavior on a regular basis.

Technology and Politics in Tunisia and Iran: Deep Packet Surveillance

For some time, I’ve been keeping an eye on how the Iranian government monitors, mediates, and influences data traffic on public networks. This has seen me write several posts, here and elsewhere, about the government’s usage of deep packet inspection, the implications of Iranian government surveillance, and the challenges posed by Iranian ISPs’ most recent network updates. Last month I was invited to give a talk at the Pacific Centre for Technology and Culture about the usage of deep packet inspection by the Iranian and Tunisian governments. Continue reading

Posted in DPI, Internet, ISPs, Privacy, Surveillance | Leave a comment

Call for Assistance: A Broadband Analysis Tool

This is a call: the code is coming, but infrastructure is needed. Can you, or someone you know, help in making some infrastructure available to bring transparency to the contemporary Canadian broadband landscape? Continue reading

Posted in Internet, ISPs, Technology | 2 Comments

Review: Surveillance or Security?

In Security or Security? The Real Risks Posed by New Wiretapping Technologies, Susan Landau focuses on the impacts of integrating surveillance systems into communications networks. Her specific thesis is that  integrating surveillance capacities into communications networks does not necessarily or inherently … Continue reading

Posted in DPI, Internet, Mobiles, Privacy, Reviews, Surveillance | Leave a comment

Deep Packet Inspection and Consumer Transparency

Deep packet inspection and Quality of Service infrastructure regularly mediates Canadians’ digital communications. Given the importance of our digital systems I think that ISPs should remain compliant with technical and regulatory transparency requirements, but also ensure that their policies are also transparent and understandable to end-users. Continue reading

Posted in CRTC, DPI, ISPs, P2P, Technology | Leave a comment