Blog Safer protects free speech through anonymity

Nonprofit organization Spirit of America recently launched Blog Safer, a wiki that hosts a series of updatable tips sheets on how to blog anonymously in countries that do not tolerate free speech.

The guides come in English, Chinese, Arabic and Persian — targeting countries like Iran, Zimbabwe, China and Saudi Arabia — places where bloggers have been subject to filtering, interrogation, torture and even imprisonment. Each guide has a specific audience in mind and outlines the steps a blogger can take to avoid identification and possible arrest.

The wiki format allows international bloggers to edit the guides to reflect a more accurate picture of the situation in their countries. Bloggers are invited to translate the guides to other languages in order to expand the project’s audience.

In focus: Daryl Cagle's Professional Cartoonists Index

When cartoonist Daryl Cagle put what he called a “vanity page” up on the Web some ten years back, he probably had no idea it would morph into one of the best-known editorial cartoon archives on the Internet.

Coaxing fellow cartoonists to post their work online in the mid-90s and shunning the notion that only vain amateur artists utilized the Web, Daryl Cagle’s Professional Cartoonists Index was born. Later, Cagle would go on to spam thousands of state school teachers’ e-mails — back when spamming was not such a no-no, Cagle said — to promote a teacher’s guide to editorial cartoons and drive traffic to the site. The resulting traffic brought Cagle enough attention to earn a partnership with Microsoft and a place in the online opinion magazine, Slate, now owned by The Washington Post Co.

Now, with a host of cartoonists from across the nation and the far reaches of the globe, Cagle’s artist army has expanded from its humble origins, and his cartoonist syndicate brings opinionated glee to hundreds of US-based newspapers.

“I’m kind of like the cartoonists’ e-bartender to the world because everybody knows me. It’s unique and kind of strange, but it works for me,” said Cagle.

“It raised my profile, and it gave me a better byline, and it was a basis for my starting my syndicate. We represent some 44 cartoonists now and distribute them to 800 newspapers — more than anybody else in editorial cartoons.”

When Microsoft sold Slate late last year, Cagle’s cartoons found a home on the MSNBC website. From this perch, Cagle continues to raise the bar for editorial cartoonists, challenging the quality of their work by way of an online method he calls “Yahtzee”.

“When a bunch of cartoonists all draw about the same thing at the same time, I call it a Yahtzee and put all their cartoons up together — and that embarrasses them and makes them think they should not draw the first thing that comes to mind. That’s done a little bit of good. The cartoonists live in fear of Yahtzees now,” said Cagle, who added that doing this on the Web has encouraged cartoonists to reflect and churn out better, more creative pieces.

The best example of a Yahtzee, Cagle said, was the weeping Statue of Liberty icon, which was rampant the day after the 9/11 tragedy. Cagle drew and posted one of these himself, only to find that most cartoonists had done the same thing.

“It was a great cartoon and I got a lot of fan-mail on it, but a week later when I realized that every cartoonist in the world drew the same cartoon on the same day, I wished I hadn’t drawn it,” he said.

Also up on the MSNBC site is Cagle’s three-year-old blog, which documents issues in editorial cartooning — and whatever Daryl Cagle may feel like at the time.

Katrina victims communicate via makeshift wireless networks

From the Washington Post: Those displaced and dispossessed by Hurricane Katrina are slowly getting their lives back, communicating with relatives through a series of improvised wireless networks set up by a band of volunteer techies, who have taken to the shelters in northeastern Louisiana.

“With few reliable communications systems in place, people and companies from around the country are converging on the region to create improvised networks that give survivors and emergency personnel ways to talk and coordinate efforts,” reported the Washington Post.

Though local networks are slowly getting back on their feet, some places remain barren pieces of communication wasteland, and several service providers have taken it upon themselves to bring Internet access to evacuees in such areas.

In Jackson, Miss., Dulles-based America Online has parked an 18-wheeler bearing 20 Internet-ready computers for those at the Mississippi State Fairgrounds, a major shelter. And at the Mangham Baptist Church, wireless service provider Mac Dearman set up an Internet phone, allowing people to access the outside world. Most used the opportunity to search for loved ones and to fill out Federal Emergency Management Agency forms to get disaster aid.