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Campaña VS.regimen castrista en internet

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  • Campaña VS.regimen castrista en internet



    Campaña VS.regimen castrista en internet

    -No vs. Cuba-

    -Fidel y Raul no son- Cuba-


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  • #2
    Re: Campaña VS.regimen castrista en internet

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    • #3
      Re: Campaña VS.regimen castrista en internet

      Les da mucha hueva levantarse para ir a protestar...
      OBJECTS IN MIRROR ARE CLOSER THAN THEY APPEAR...

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      • #4
        Re: Campaña VS.regimen castrista en internet

        los hermanos castro deben poner sus barbas a remojar...
        no solo de cable vive el hombre

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Campaña VS.regimen castrista en internet

          Social Media as a Tool for Protest

          By Marko Papic and Sean Noonan | February 3, 2011

          Internet services were reportedly restored in Egypt on Feb. 2 after being completely shut down for two days. Egyptian authorities unplugged the last Internet service provider (ISP) still operating Jan. 31 amidst ongoing protests across the country. The other four providers in Egypt — Link Egypt, Vodafone/Raya, Telecom Egypt and Etisalat Misr — were shut down as the crisis boiled over on Jan. 27. Commentators immediately assumed this was a response to the organizational capabilities of social media websites that Cairo could not completely block from public access.
          The role of social media in protests and revolutions has garnered considerable media attention in recent years. Current conventional wisdom has it that social networks have made regime change easier to organize and execute. An underlying assumption is that social media is making it more difficult to sustain an authoritarian regime — even for hardened autocracies like Iran and Myanmar — which could usher in a new wave of democratization around the globe. In a Jan. 27 YouTube interview, U.S. President Barack Obama went as far as to compare social networking to universal liberties such as freedom of speech. Read more »

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