Friday, January 28, 2011
Social media @ the front line in Egypt [-Read, learn, and start tweeting now!]
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| Protesters have used social media sites -- when not blocked -- to organize and spread pictures of demonstrations in Egypt. | 
By Tim Lister and Emily Smith
CNN
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Facebook, Twitter and others are being used by protesters in Egypt
 - Social media have become a critical tool for arranging rendezvous
 - Efforts to block internet traffic from Egypt have met with some success
 
Editor's note: Also see CNN Radio's report on the role social media is playing in North Africa's unrest. 
(CNN) -- As in Tunisia, the protest movement in Egypt is taking advantage of social media to communicate, inform and organize.
Despite attempts to block  Twitter, Facebook and other sites (the government denies it was  responsible), a Facebook page devoted to Friday's planned protests had  more than 80,000 followers as of 2 p.m. ET Thursday, compared with some  20,000 the previous day.
Following Twitter comments with  hashtags such as #Cairo, #jan25 and #Suez generates a huge flood of  tweets. There is a breathless excitement about many entries, which are  mainly in Arabic, English and French, but there are also scores of  rumors, much invention and plenty of hyperbole.
Sifting the wheat from the  chaff, given the extraordinary volume of traffic, is a full-time job.  One typically overstated entry on a Facebook page Thursday read: "Live  ammunition is being fired at protesters. ... Innocent protesters who  want their basic rights are being massacred." There is as much  misinformation as information.
But social media can help tip  off journalists about developments in places they can't get to. For  example, it's been difficult (and risky) for foreign journalists to  report from the city of Suez, which appears to have seen some of the  worst violence of the past few days. But a steady stream of tweets and  blog entries, as well as photos and cell-phone video, has provided at  least some guidance on the rapidly evolving situation there. In a  country the size of Egypt, even large media organizations can't be  everywhere, especially when the security forces are throwing up  roadblocks.
As the protests have had (so  far) little formal organization, social media have become a critical  tool for arranging rendezvous. One Twitter entry, for example, called  for a march at 3 p.m. Thursday in Giza, a suburb of Cairo. Another on  Wednesday called people to Tahrir Square in central Cairo. Of course,  there is a weakness in such methods -- because the authorities can also  read them, and a plethora of such rallying calls can lead to confusion.
In any case, social media may be  overtaken as an organizing tool on Friday -- by Egypt's mosques. The  Muslim Brotherhood, which is influential in thousands of mosques  throughout the country, has called for protests after Friday prayers.  But the Brotherhood is playing catch-up with a movement it has done  little to influence so far.
Social media are also a source  of practical advice for those on the streets. One tweeter advised people  how to wash tear gas from their faces, and warned people to avoid  wearing contact lenses during the protests. "Spit, blow your nose, rinse  out your mouth, gargle. Do eyewash from inside to outside with your  head tilted to side," the tweet said.
The sheer scale of the online  "movement" -- and the speed with which it has grown -- is breathtaking.  The hashtag #jan25 began "trending worldwide" on Twitter Thursday,  generating dozens of tweets and retweets every minute. When Mohamed  ElBaradei arrived in Cairo late Thursday, the retweets went into  overdrive, complete with plenty of advice for him.
A Facebook page dedicated to the  memory of a young man allegedly beaten to death by police in Alexandria  -- "We Are All Khaled Said" -- has mushroomed to more than 20,000  followers. It includes cartoons, photographs and videos, as well as  messages of solidarity from across the Arab world and beyond. One entry  from an Algerian read: "People of the Algeria are with you" (sic). 
There have been some imaginative  Facebook and blog creations, too. One activist used dramatic photos of  the unrest in Cairo to create online posters for Friday's planned  protests, which he titled "Walk Like an Egyptian." Others have set  photos and video to music, and posted reports from international TV  networks. Egyptian state media have so far offered scant coverage of the  protests.
In another example of how the  digital age has changed everything: dozens of high-quality photos of the  demonstrations have been posted on the online photo-share site Flickr  -- although that's not without risk if the authorities decide to track  down protest ringleaders.
Online activists -- normally  young professionals and often multilingual -- have also been quick to  find ways to combat the interruption of social media sites, with links  to sites offering free downloads. One message read: "Nokia users in  Egypt, use Snaptu application and Twitter and Facebook will never go  down."
People have also used sites  known as proxy servers, which allow users to surf the web almost  anonymously and offer access to banned sites by circumventing the host  country's servers. A similar method was used by WikiLeaks when its  website was taken off Amazon's servers in the United States.
But whoever is trying to  interrupt internet traffic from Egypt is having some success. On  Tuesday, a broadcasting site called Ustream had a feed showing protests  in central Cairo. But the stream was gone a few hours later, replaced by  a message that read: "Servers unavailable -- possibly blocked in  Egypt?" And whether because of the volume of traffic or efforts to  hobble social media, many in Egypt were lamenting their inability to  access Facebook and Twitter on Thursday.
TE Data, an internet service  provider that says it provides 70% of Egypt's internet infrastructure,  tweeted on Monday that it was not being shut down. But one customer said  Thursday he had called the company to complain about service disruption  only to be told that the servers were "undergoing repair." There were  also tweets -- unconfirmed -- about the BlackBerry messenger service,  BBM, being shut down.
Anonymous, a U.S.-based group  also involved with the WikiLeaks cause, has lent its support to the  protest movement in Egypt. Its activists run computer programs that  flood designated websites with requests until they crash. On Wednesday,  Anonymous activists tried unsuccessfully to disrupt the Egyptian  Ministry of Communications and Information Technology site.
But it would be misleading to  suggest that until this week, social media had no role in Egypt. A few  bold bloggers like Kareem Amer (recently released from prison after  serving a four-year sentence for "defaming the president and spreading  information disruptive to public order") have long been a thorn in the  side of the Mubarak government. Amer is blogging again this week from  the city of Alexandria, advising the president that it's time to leave.
Strangely enough, one of the  earliest hints of the power of Twitter came from Egypt. In April 2008,  an American journalist, James Karl Buck, and his translator were  detained while covering an anti-government protest. Buck managed to send  out a one-word tweet while being taken to the police station. It said  simply "arrested." Within seconds friends and followers knew of his  situation and worked to get him released. Buck was able to post from  jail until -- less than 24 hours later -- he was able to tweet: "free."


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