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All the paid seat fillers were equipped with small yellow highliters to identify themselves to the Comcast organizer.
There is a lot to be afraid of no matter where we live. Wars continue to rage. Tyrants are on the ascent. We are unable to keep up with the pace at which the climate is changing. We don't seem to be able to do anything about it, though. Given all of that, it shouldn't come as a surprise that another threat is overlooked: the worldwide float toward "splinternet."
"Splinternet" is a word for the deficiency of the single, internationally associated, and decentralized Web. Our perception of a single resource is fragmenting into distinct government- or business-controlled networks. It must be stopped.
China's Internet access has long been vastly different from that of other countries. The Web in China is firmly controlled through focal activity and the alleged "Extraordinary Firewall." Despite the fact that China is unable to access many areas of the global Internet, it appears that other governments are interested in this mode of operation.
Russia has been endeavoring to impersonate China's methodology for north of 10 years, through "RuNet." Because it rerouted existing Ukrainian network connections through Russia in the areas it occupies, Russia's invasion of Ukraine drew more attention to RuNet.
The Internet would be significantly less accessible to all Cambodians under the proposed "National Internet Gateway," which would control all local and international online traffic through a centralized government facility.
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