Lawfare Daily: How Internet Infrastructure Affects Digital Repression in Venezuela
Published by The Lawfare Institute
in Cooperation With
Lawfare Fellow in Technology Policy and Law Eugenia Lostri sits down with Esteban Carisimo, a Postdoctoral Researcher at Northwestern University to talk about the digital repression in Venezuela after the recent elections. Carisimo co-authored a recent report on the effects of the Venezuelan crisis on internet infrastructure. They discuss how internet censorship impacts the protests, how Venezuela's infrastructure compares to other countries in the region, and what the path to recovery looks like.
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Transcript
[Introduction]
Esteban Carisimo:
Venezuela's international connectivity remains the same as when Chávez won the
election 25 years ago, but the internet has dramatically changed since then.
Eugenia Lostri: It's
the Lawfare Podcast. I'm Lawfare’s fellow in Technology Policy
and Law with Esteban Carisimo, a postdoctoral researcher at Northwestern
University.
Esteban Carisimo: I
think if the political issue doesn't get resolved, solved in some way, we will
not see any change sadly. If we don't see a path to normalization in the
country, we will not see that in the internet either.
Eugenia Lostri: Today
we're talking about the digital repression in Venezuela after the recent
elections, how the current internet infrastructure facilitates it, and what the
path to recovery looks like.
[Main Podcast]
So on July 28th, Venezuela held a presidential election, which
President Nicolás Maduro alleges to have won with I believe it's 51 percent of
the vote.
Now, these results have been widely questioned by the U.S., by
several countries in the region. And in a new report the UN says that
Venezuela's national electoral authority kind of fell short of following
through on some of the basic transparency and integrity measures that are
required. There's a review from the Washington Post of precinct level
tally sheets that kind of matches the results of independent exit polls and
analysis. All of that actually gives the opposition candidate Edmundo González victory
in the last elections.
So I was wondering if you could maybe get us started by walking
us a little bit through the context in Venezuela ahead of the elections. Like,
how would you describe the mood? Would you say that the election was perceived
maybe as a fair opportunity to exercise democracy?
Esteban Carisimo:
Yeah, well, this was the first time in many years in which the opposition
unified behind a single platform. This was under the leadership of Maria Correa
Machado, who then nominated Edmundo González Urrutia, former diplomat, to be
the presidential candidate of this platform. And this was a great opportunity. This
brought a lot of enthusiasm to the population and to the people outside of
Venezuela, which was sadly not able to vote there. So this opened the
opportunity to the opposition to win or to have a, let's say, a fair contest
with the presidential candidate Maduro for his second reelection but the the
results were quite disappointing.
So because all polls before the election suggested that the
opposition was to win there but this didn't happen. The National Electoral Council
said that Maduro won for nearly 10 points. without showing any evidence there.
And the opposition says that they have evidence of the tally sheets and now
those tally sheets are online. So now we don't know what is going to happen in
the next days or the next month. If Maduro is going to take his third term in
January or if Edmundo González is going to be the president.
Eugenia Lostri: So
this hope that the opposition had ahead of the elections, just because they
were consolidating behind this one platform, you know, and now the questions
about lack of transparency around the results did lead to a lot of protests in
Venezuela. And there's been reports of repression, both physical and digital.
So can you talk through maybe the protesters demands and then the government's
response and in both the physical and the digital realm?
Esteban Carisimo:
Yeah. So these are very controversial results, right? What the National Electoral
Council said is not what the population was expecting and what the votes are showing,
or details are showing. So all of the people were really upset in Venezuela. But
the protests were very peaceful, which is surprising. People, and Maria Cuneo
Machado had that message to demonstrate in a peaceful way, but of course the
government did not tolerate dissident. And they repressed the protests or at
the beginning, they repressed the protests.
And this, the same happened in, on the internet. We've read
reports from very prestigious organizations that several services have been
blocked. This is not the first time this has happened in Venezuela. The same
organizations reported this before, the Freedom House, the United Nations say
the same, but this seems to be more severe. The government is trying to
suffocate the digital protests as well.
Eugenia Lostri: So,
so what does that look like? How is it more severe than in previous cases? And
what does it look like in practice when, you know, your online protest is being
censored?
Esteban Carisimo:
Well, what is different here is because; there are many things we can talk
about.
The first is the extent of the repression or the censorship in
the duration and the number of services that are being blocked. In the past,
we, we heard about a very isolated cases that didn't last to long. And now
we're seeing that this is expanding to many services. For example, X, or Twitter,
WhatsApp, and other digital communication means, which are really important for
Venezuelans.
Think about this: Venezuela is a country that at its peak had
33 million people. And now approximately 25 percent of that population lives
abroad. So when Twitter or WhatsApp is blocked, it's not only the protests.
It's the way you have to communicate with your family that is living abroad. So
Venezuelans are experiencing a very hard time with their communications being
banned.
Eugenia Lostri: Now,
I know that you've researched the way that authoritarian leaders can quell
protests through the censorship of the internet or, you know, by disrupting it.
So even if we're not speaking exclusively about the context in Venezuela, maybe
can you expand a little bit more on what are the tools that you've seen being
used by authoritarian regimes? What are the commonalities? Are there some, I
don't know, some actions that are region or country specific that you see only
in Venezuela, or is there like a common playbook here?
Esteban Carisimo: Okay,
there are various methods to impose censorship on the internet. As you can say
that, there are different mechanisms to block, for example, specific content or
specific domains, for example, a website or specific website. Or, well the most
extreme cases are the ones that disconnect users to gain access to the network.
So in recent days, we see that, for example, NetBlocks or OONI,
which are very prestigious organizations reporting censorship, detected
instances of censorship in Venezuela. This seems to be targeted censorship on
services. As I said, Twitter, WhatsApp, I think Reddit was blocked too. Freedom
House publishes an annual report called ‘Freedom of the Net,’ and they
highlight the censorship in the past in Venezuela as well. So this is not new
in Venezuela.
But as you said, other governments have other practices and I
collaborated with colleagues on a study last year in which we reported national,
nationwide government order shutdowns. This is the most extreme censorship that
disconnects all users regardless of their activities on the internet. And this
typically happens or this type of censorship is conducted in countries where
governments do not have the technological capabilities to apply more targeted
censorship. So instead of this connecting just a service, they don't have the
tools to target to a specific service, for example, Twitter, WhatsApp, or
digital communications. When we studied this last year, which was a study that
looked to between 2018 and 2020 to 2023, we did not find any type of
disconnection, government ordered disconnection or shutdowns in Venezuela. So
Venezuela is apparently having the technological means to apply targeted
censorship.
Eugenia Lostri:
That's really interesting. And then just to, you know, make this super clear to
anyone, to anyone that's listening, the real world effect of this digital
censorship, you know, like you can imagine it can be harder to organize the
protests. It can be harder to report on what's actually happening when there is
a crackdown of the protests. But what are the maybe other effects that we're
not thinking about when you have online censorship? What does that look like in
the quote unquote real world?
Esteban Carisimo:
Well, it depends on the type of censorship that is being applied. When the
government tried to reduce the protests or to mitigate the protests, it has
collateral effects. As I said, when they, they, when they apply these shutdowns,
everybody gets a lot offline, for example, if you have, I don't know, a shop or
a cafe, and if your business relies on the internet, as many things relies on
the internet these days, it's going to be affected.
In digital communications as well, WhatsApp is a widely adopted
tool, not only for, to organize a protest, it’s also for, I said, a family
communication or other businesses. But when Venezuela wants to extend this, it's
going to start blocking other services, which is going to have collateral
damages. For example, a domain may need, may not be restricted for a single
service. For example, Amazon or cloud providers are serving millions of
websites. And if you'd like, if the government wants to block that, it's going
to be, it's going to end up blocking many things altogether.
Eugenia Lostri: No,
this that you mentioned, the capability that the government has to do targeted
censorship is really interesting. And, you know, I'd like to connect this to
this new paper that that you authored on the effects of the Venezuelan crisis
on internet infrastructure in the country. Right. But before we dive into your
findings and how this connects to everything that is going on. I would like to
ask what, what were your motivations in writing this? You know, why did you
think that the effects of the crisis on internet infrastructure was, you know,
you needed to focus on that issue?
Esteban Carisimo:
Yeah, I'm going to leave aside all my personal views and motivations here. I'm
going to only use my research motivations here. The first is more my
background. I studied Latin America's internet infrastructure as part of my
research agenda. I started my research career studying the transformation of
Bolivian-Paraguay internet infrastructures after the development of some key
infrastructures in the country. This was approximately 10 years back. During
the pandemic, I also published a paper which investigated the creation of
internet exchange points, which are critical infrastructures that are in Latin
America and in many other countries as well. These infrastructures serve for
domestic data exchanges. And my study was about Latin America. What is the role
and the creation of these internet exchange points in the region?
So studying Venezuela is another piece of my research agenda.
But at the same time, Venezuela is quite unique. This crisis invited us to
investigate the consequences of a large crisis on internet infrastructure. So
not too long ago, Venezuela was a wealthy country with a thriving middle class.
So this is a very unique starting point. Many countries have experienced
different types of traumas, but anyone similar to Venezuela. When the crisis
started, Venezuela's internet development was similar to the rest of Latin
American countries. Venezuela had quote unquote good internet for Latin
American standards and ten years later, we'd like to know what's going on
there. So this is very unique. So, the starting point of Venezuela was middle
income country with good internet. So we'd like to know what happens when the
country faces a crisis of such magnitude.
Eugenia Lostri: So I
was really curious and maybe this connects back to the theme of lack of
transparency, right, that we were talking about before. But I'm sure that
collecting the information that you needed in order to conduct this assessment
about what has been happening with Venezuela's internet infrastructure in the
last 10 years was not the easiest thing. So what was your methodology? How did
you get around some of the challenges in acquiring that information?
Esteban Carisimo:
Yeah, so the methodological part is where in the part we collected data.
Actually, we did not collect it. We use publicly available datasets. But the
question here is which are the right datasets to capture what happened in
Venezuela during the past decade. So we need to get data from Venezuela, which
is, that can give us a longitudinal view for at least 10 years of what happened
there. But there are several internet data sets or internet measurements data
set that can give us this perspective. And we combined, or we employed a wide
ratio of publicly available data sets for this purpose.
So this is the part that I'm going to start talking about
technical stuff, internet measurements. This is not trying to be a computer
network class, which is the class I teach at Northwestern. And I did it before
at the University of Buenos Aires. I'm not trying to give a lecture on
measurement platforms, but I need to give some explanation of how we get this
visibility. How can we view the problem?
And I'd like to start with an example, which is RIPE Atlas. RIPE
Atlas is a measurement platform. So, let's think it's a network of computers
which is globally distributed and it's administrated by the European Regional
Internet Registry. So, this platform seeks volunteers willing to host a small, non-intrusive
measurement device. It's like you plug a little box, the size is, I don't know,
it's like a wallet, that you plug to your network or connect to your Wi-Fi. And
it's going to execute non-intrusive internet measurements. And currently, RIPE
administrates approximately 10,000 devices around the world, nearly in every
country. So, these boxes are launching internet measurements all the time. And
with this, we can construct a view of the reality of different services.
So, this is like an example, but we use many data sets. We use
many data sets collected by these platforms. Another research measurement
platform, which is administered by CAIDA, which is a research lab at UC San
Diego. M-Lab, which is an initiative founded by Google. And other data, which
is public network data reported by Meta. And with all this information we, we
created, because that is the way, the way I can explain it. We created a
multidimensional view of the Venezuela's internet in the past 10 years.
Eugenia Lostri: And
what did you find? What were your, you know, main takeaways?
Esteban Carisimo:
Well, this isn't a very extensive list of findings here but the results are,
well, it's catastrophic. Venezuela's internet infrastructure has not seen any major
investments or updates for at least 10 years. So let me explain a few of them.
It's going to take us a very long time to explain everything, what we found
there. But I'd like to show you some things that are very clear to explain what
happened there.
So, for example, submarine connectivity. Submarine cable
networks is one of the very first pieces we examined there. Submarine cables
are key infrastructures that enable intercontinental connectivity, or in many
cases, international connectivity as well. For example, we use submarine cable
infrastructure when we download data from a server that is hosting a website or
another resource abroad. Let's think about Venezuela. For example, a user that
is fetching content that is being served from Miami. That is going to require a
submarine cable. But we also use submarine cables in video calls. When
participants are in different continents, it's the only option we have. We tend
to think that satellites are connecting continents, but it's not typically the
case. 99 percent of intercontinental communications use submarine cable
infrastructure. So submarine cable infrastructures are undeniably key
infrastructures. They are very expensive and they require at least a few years
for planning and deployment.
So in this context, we investigated what happened in Venezuela.
Was Venezuela able to keep pace of construction of this infrastructure? And
sadly, the answer is no. Venezuela only planned and deployed one submarine
cable since Chávez took office in 1998. One cable. But the most important part
is what is, what is the nature of this cable? This cable has no impact because
it only connects to Cuba. In fact, this cable was created to give Cuba access
to the internet through Venezuela rather, Venezuela benefiting from it. And
this highly contrasts with Latin America, which constructed nearly 40 submarine
cables during the same period. So, in summary, Venezuela's international
connectivity remains the same as when Chávez won the election 25 years ago, but
the internet has dramatically changed since then. So, this is the first piece
of the results I can show you, but we have many more results.
Eugenia Lostri: As I
was reading your paper, I was, I was really struck by this comparison that you
were able to draw between where Venezuela is and where the rest of the region
was. I think maybe the one that struck me was the most was this speed of
connectivity, the, the download speed. Because it's just, I, I cannot imagine
going back to a time where you just like actually had to wait for a website to
load and I, I just, I thought that was crazy. Even if just as a way for me to
remember what it was like in the, in the early days of internet connectivity.
Esteban Carisimo:
Well, this is even worse because we are not downloading content as, as we were
doing it in 1998. Now we, our requirements are completely different and
Venezuela's internet capabilities do not meet those, the current standards. So
let me give you the numbers of Venezuela's bandwidth.
So we use M-Lab, which give us a speed test, a repository of at
least 15 years of download speeds, and the current median download speeds in
Venezuela are three megabits per second, while the regional average is above 20
milliseconds. So Venezuela is nearly 10 percent of the regional average.
But the most important part here is the evolution. Venezuela is
at 3 Mbps now, but it was stagnated at 1 Mbps for more than 10 years. And in
the recent years, they have a very quick growth from one to three. Well, the
region is still in 20, but they, they narrowed this gap from one to three in
approximately two, three years since 2020. Because CANTV.net, which is the
largest provider in the country, the state-owned provider in Venezuela, started
to offer high speed services. But these high speed services are unaffordable
for Venezuelans because they cost 10 times the minimum wage. So Venezuela is
recovering, but only a portion is benefiting from it, and it's still way behind
of the rest of the region.
Eugenia Lostri: So it
really does make intuitive sense that the crisis in Venezuela is the main
driver of this lag in internet infrastructure, right? But, and you did mention
that they were roughly in the same spot as the rest of the region 10 years ago.
But how did you go about assessing and establishing this causality? Is there
something more specific that you can point to?
Esteban Carisimo:
Well, Latin American countries, we can say that Latin American countries have a
lot of commonalities. So we expect Venezuela to share those commonalities with
the rest of Latin American countries. And Venezuela did share those
commonalities 20 years back, but we don't see that anymore. For example, there
are many things that we can see and we can explain that Venezuela is not
experiencing the same growth path or, or development as other countries.
For example, there is another thing that I wanted to mention,
which is period facilities. What are peer facilities? Peer facilities are
buildings where network providers put dedicated network equipment to peer with
each other. Basically, network providers go and install routers, and with these
routers they exchange data. So the region these days has 600 peering
facilities, Latin America as a whole has 600 facilities, with Brazil having
approximately 300 facilities. But other countries like Mexico and Argentina,
which are large territorial countries, highly populated in the case of Mexico,
has 50 each. The number in Venezuela is 4.
So out of 600, Venezuela only hosts less than 1%. And compared
to Argentina, which has a similar population, it has 4 compared to 50. This is
quite different. So it's impossible to see that Venezuela is going to have
similar internet qualities or characteristics of other countries. But we expect
it to be similar. And in terms of submarine cables, we were talking about that
before. Venezuela was leading submarine cable deployments in the 90s. Probably
because it's close to the United States, have a privileged location, but, well,
it's not anymore.
Eugenia Lostri:
That's, that's really striking. So, are we talking about a lack of investment? We're
talking about an isolationist position. Is it there, but it's not affordable?
What are, what are some of the causes of this delay?
Esteban Carisimo:
There are many things all together happening in the country. One of the things
that I wanted to share with, I think it's very, it's going to depict what
happens in Venezuela is the role of Caveguías or CANTV, which is Venezuela's state-owned
provider. CANTV is the largest ISP in the country, has been historically the
most important provider in Venezuela. It was privatized in the 90s and re-nationalized
by Chávez in 2007. So, the country is the largest and is state owned. And
theoretically, and let me quote it, theoretically offers affordable services because
if you would like to get that subscription, you'll never get it.
So our study investigated what happened with CANTV especially
with its network connectivity during the past 25 years. And to examine CANTV’s
connectivity, we examined their, CANTV's upstream providers. When you have an
internet provider, it's typically connected to other providers. And what we
call access providers, which are the providers we use to connect to the
internet, are connected to transit providers that interconnect our residential
ISPs.
So we, we track during 25 years, changes in upstream
connectivity of CANTV. And one of the things we noticed is CANTV has been
losing upstream providers in the past 10 years, since the crisis started. A big
difference here is that U.S. based providers or U.S. based companies stop
peering with CANTV, stop announcing or sending traffic to CANTV. And we don't
know the root causes here, but we can speculate here. The first one is CANTV 's
insolvency. The company is broken, so cannot pay in U.S. dollars upstream
connectivity to send traffic to other countries. And we can think that the
sanctions are going to have a negative effect. But here, the U.S. imposed
sanctions, so I doubt U.S. based providers can provide any services to CANTV.
Eugenia Lostri:
That's, that's a great example. Is there any other, you know, story like this
or vignette that you know really struck you that that represents the like the
really deep effects of the crisis on internet infrastructure that you want to
share?
Esteban Carisimo:
Well there are others. One of the things that we can talk is about what we call
content providers or CDNs, content delivery networks. The content delivery networks
are key infrastructures that serve the content we use. Every time we get to a
website, the modern way to deliver the content we are consuming is through
infrastructure that are specifically designed to serve this content. There are
some companies that offer these services. For example, if I have a company, I
don't have to serve the content to my users, I'm going to pay a third-party
company. That is going to do this for me. It's like a mail service, not an
email, like the post service in the United States. Somebody is going to deliver
content for me. I don't have to deliver it myself.
And this company is typically the deployed infrastructure in
all countries to have like logistics there. It's like having content warehouses
in the country, data centers. That is the example. But when we look at
Venezuela, we have different stories there. We see that some content providers
deployed infrastructure within Venezuela before the crisis started. But the
content providers which are more modern or technologies that did not exist
before the crisis, those content providers did not deploy any infrastructure
there. Why? There are many whys.
Sanctions could be a reason. The second one is they don't know
what is going to happen with their infrastructure. Is it secure to place your
own hardware, probably with intellectual property inside of it, in a country
that you don't trust? So when those servers are not in the country, users are
going to experience a worse quality of experience. Their user experience, surfing
the web, watching videos or any type of content is going to be much worse.
Eugenia Lostri: So,
you know, what, what can be done? You know, what would it take to get Venezuela
up to speed, so to speak?
Esteban Carisimo:
Well, there are many things that we can think about. I think if the political
issue doesn't get resolved, solved in some way, we will not see any changes
sadly. Maybe I'm wrong, but I don't think if we, if we don't see a path to
normalization in the country, we will not see that in the internet either.
Eugenia Lostri:
Right. I mean, we have the last 10 years to, to look at, to see how that hasn't
helped.
Esteban Carisimo:
Yeah. So let's suppose Venezuela, it starts a path to normalization. And I
think there are some quick fixes and some other long term goals there. Quick
fixes: I was saying that CANTV lost a lot of providers. The infrastructure is
there. If providers were serving CANTV, I don't know, five, 10 years back, they
are, they have the infrastructure to start serving CANTV again. So it's a quick
fix. They need to resume their connections, their connectivity. This is, let's
say, this is code. It's not infrastructure. They need to flip the switch and
start serving CANTV again and I think
that will help to improve international connectivity.
Another piece of infrastructure that I did not mention is DNS.
DNS is like internet phone book. Let me give a quick example here. When we
visit a website, for example, www.example.com, we need to transform that name
into bits. The, our monitors and computer networks, adapters, they use bits
instead of strings. That conversion uses a hierarchical distributed database,
which is DNS. I don't want to explain the details. But in this database the
best you can have is to have a closed replica or instance of that service close
to you. And those servers were installed in Venezuela. So Venezuela has those
servers, but they are unreachable. We don't know what's going on. The
infrastructure is there, but Venezuelans not getting content from there.
They're not exchanging data with those servers. So I think I can imagine that
those servers are still there and running, but the only thing we need to do is
to improve the connectivity there to optimize their routing to get to those
servers. And if we can do that, Venezuelans will immediately get better
internet.
But the last part is in investments. If the government, if we
see a regime change in Venezuela and we see that the country goes to a
democratization and normalization, we're going to see foreign investments or
international aid to Venezuela. Venezuelans need urgent investment in submarine
cable, as I said, 25 years without cables when the internet has expanded
dramatically during the same period. Peer facilities, less than 1 percent of
Latin American facilities are in Venezuela. That is unacceptable.
Eugenia Lostri: So
you kind of hinted at this by mentioning international aid, but do you see a
particular role for maybe regional support, whether through an organization
like the Organization of American States or in a bilateral way?
Esteban Carisimo:
Well, I think it's not only governmental entities. I think companies can help
here. I think companies are going to be interested in getting back in
Venezuela. As soon as the country gets better normalized. I think Venezuela is
a very attractive country for investments, has a large population. It's a
country that hasn't seen any investments. So I think probably I'm not in the
business, but I guess that providers will be interested to get back in
Venezuela. Content providers will be interested in hosting their, or having
their service there to offer better services there.
I think international aid is going to help. I think governments
are going to be willing to support Venezuela. This, as I said, submarine cables
are very expensive to install. But they are not as expensive as many other
things that Venezuela needs, and they are going to have a very quick impact on
a very important one. In society, everything on these days runs or needs the
internet. So I don't know. I believe that international aid, multilateral or
create, create agencies or any other organization is going to be interested in
funding projects in Venezuela.
Eugenia Lostri:
Let's, let's dig a little bit more on that because as your paper recognizes,
we've seen a lot of really good reporting on the effects of the Venezuelan
crisis on health and education mortality. And I, I think your research is a
really good contribution to that kind of wide picture of what does the country
look like a decade after. So, given all the needs in Venezuela, if, you know,
again, the hypothetical normalization of and stabilization of the political
situation. What is the case for kind of immediate support for internet
infrastructure?
Esteban Carisimo: I
think that the most urgent here is to re, to restate, to reconnect Venezuela
with its former providers. That is the quickest and easiest way to do it. I
would say that we can think about emergency plans here, not the optimal
internet structure that we can build for Venezuela, but the quickest to get it
better. Venezuela can connect to, for example, there are some hubs close to
Venezuela that could be used to get better internet. For example, Columbia. one
of the things that my paper or our paper shows is that these devices that I
mentioned to measure the internet, the ones that are next to the Colombian
border have better, I don't, I don't want to talk about the technicalities, but
let's say in one metric, we can say they have better internet than the ones
that are in Caracas, which is far from the border with Colombia. So one of the
things that I can imagine is what if we connect those providers in the border
to Colombia? Colombia has much better infrastructure than Venezuela these days.
So that is an option.
Brazil is a huge hub for the internet. Sao Paulo is, runs the
largest IXP, the internet exchange point. Maybe Sao Paulo is far from Caracas,
but Fortaleza is not too far. Fortaleza has become a very important hub in
Latin America as well. But talking about other countries which are small
countries or territories close to Venezuela but with good internet, we can talk
about Curaçao, If I remember correctly, Curaçao is approximately 100 kilometers
from Caracas. And they have good internet infrastructure. I don't know if it's
good enough to support all 33 million or 25 million people these days in
Venezuela connected to the internet, but they have good infrastructure and it's
only 200 kilometers. And the same for Trinidad and Tobago, it's on the east
side of Venezuela, it's further from Caracas, but it’s another option.
Eugenia Lostri: Now,
I want to connect these kind of two sections of our conversation, right? We
had, we talked about the protests around the election, and we also talked about
the state of internet infrastructure. Now, would you say that current state of
internet infrastructure eases or supports digital repression? Would you say it
makes it harder, or it doesn't really have much weight at all, it would still
happen in the same ways?
Esteban Carisimo:
Well, it's not very clear. It's not a straightforward connection here. In the
paper I mentioned before that in which we study shutdowns, government order
shutdowns, one of the things we noticed, it's easier for governments that hold
large state owned providers to shut down the internet. But we haven't seen any
shutdown in Venezuela. If I try to make an analogy, we can say that CANTV has a
major role in the country, so that could help Venezuela to apply censorship in
the country. But at the end of the day, if you have a repressive government with,
I don't know, with power, whatever power is in the country, they are going to
be able to shut down or ban the internet in the way they want. But for sure,
centralized infrastructures, as the one we see in Venezuela, the lack of
alternative paths, make this simpler to conduct censorship.
Eugenia Lostri: So,
Esteban, before we, we wrap up the conversation, do you have any last thoughts,
any wisdom that you want to make sure that, that our listeners get?
Esteban Carisimo:
Yeah, this is, this is now just personal. I hope Venezuela can find a path to
normalization soon. That is my personal, my personal hope here and I'm very
optimistic the country is going to recover soon. And if the country starts the
path to normalization. I'm pretty sure the internet is going to one of the
things that they're going to address, at the very first initiatives of the
government. I think everybody knows that the internet is a key tool for modern
life, for businesses, for education, for government as well. And I think, and
I'm optimistic that this is going to happen soon, probably next January.
Eugenia Lostri:
Here's hoping. Thank you so much for joining me today. This was, this was
great.
Esteban Carisimo:
Thank you.
Eugenia Lostri: The Lawfare
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