The P2P Foundatation’s ChokePoint Project was recently the subject of a feature article in the New Scientist:
WHEN the Egyptian authorities realised protesters were using the internet to organise themselves in January, they came up with a simple solution: in an instant they disconnected the nation, cutting off anti-government dissidents from an invaluable resource.
The outage inspired James Burke and Chris Pinchen – both members of the P2P Foundation – to begin work on the ChokePoint Project. The idea is to compile a real-time interactive map of the entire internet and identify potential choke points – the physical and virtual locations where internet access could be easily compromised – and who has the power to strangle them.
New Scientist interviewed James Burke after the Ars Electronica festival – read the full article here