Sun Tzu - Art of War

''Be extremely subtle, even to the point of formlessness. Be extremely mysterious, even to the point of soundlessness" - Sun Tzu

Sunday, July 19, 2015

Sarawak Report Unblock Censorship Howto

The Malaysian government has decided to block www.sarawakreport.org from local access. It means the information published by http://www.sarawakreport.org is very damaging to Najib and Rosmah. By blocking access, it shows the government don't even has pants to go in this war.

ACCESS VIA GOOGLE CACHE:

Basically Google Cache is in the form of the following schema:

http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:www.sarawakreport.org/

Instead of retyping above for every different articles -
simply go to

Google Cache links  of Sarawakreport at NewsKini

and look  for  [GC - Google Cache]  links there - it should work with latest articles from sarawakreport.org.




A ROSMAH SHOW OF POWER OR SIMPLY A VERIFIED EXPOSURE?

It is interesting to note this blocking was activated after Rosmah was exposed twice (RM 2,000,000 transaction and a photo in yatch). Did Rosmah ever issued a denial of those extra-ordinary transaction? There is something really bad inside the photo below which can blow secret things apart and verify all doubts.
DNS BLOCK IS TOO EASY TO BYPASS

Basically MCMC type of blocking is a DNS (domain name service) repoint where the standard DNS provided by your ISP has been modified so that the name www.sarawakreport.org will point to a blacklisted IP (ip address).
To circumvent the blocking just change your DNS server setup to public DNS, either A) or B) below
A) Google Public DNS
  • 8.8.8.8
  • 8.8.4.4

B) OpenDNS:
  • 208.67.222.222
  • 208.67.220.220

HOW TO CHANGE DNS SERVER?

Please refer to Open DNS step-by-step procedure

STILL BLOCKED??? THEN INSTALL TOR PROJECT BROWSER

Sooner or later they might decide to block access to sarawakreport completely (via IP and port). In such case -- perhaps it is best to install TOR ANONYMOUS BROWSING PROGRAM into your PC - especially when you don't want the 'Special Branch' to 'identify' your internet activities.
Below is www.sarawakreport.org screenshot using TOR browser

The TOR browser is pretty straight-forward to install and it is free!

Reference: GIZMODO: Malaysia Admits to Censoring the Internet 946

Jeremy Malcolm and Sarah Myers West Filed to: internet 7/22/15 3:20am

Malaysia Admits to Censoring the Internet

In 2011, Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak promised that Malaysia would never censor the Internet. Speaking at the first Malaysian—ASEAN Regional Bloggers Conference, Najib said: “I have no doubts whatsoever that Malaysia has one of the liveliest blogospheres in the world. And definitely one of the freest if not the most free…[former Prime Minister Dr. Mahathir Mohamad] made the promise to the world that Malaysia would never censor the Internet. My government is fully committed to that wisdom. We intend to keep his word.”
Four years later, beleaguered by allegations that $700 million in funds were suspiciously transferred from a Malaysian state investment fund into his personal bank account, Najib went back on that promise.

Blocking of the Sarawak Report

The UK-based news website the Sarawak Report was blocked in Malaysia on July 19, 2015 upon orders from the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC). The site remains inaccessible from within the country unless users access the site on their mobile phones or via a VPN. The MCMC ordered Malaysia’s Internet service providers to take the site down after it published news on the bank transfer allegations, though reports suggest the block has been unevenly enforced. The MCMC’s rationale for their order was that the site has published “unverified information” and posed a threat to “national security.”
This is the first time Malaysia has publicly acknowledged blocking a political website, and it is particularly notable because the case strikes at the heart of political corruption within the country.
The story surrounding the suspicious bank transfer initially broke on July 2, when the Wall Street Journal and Sarawak Report published the result of an investigation into a Malaysian investment fund, 1Malaysian Development Berhad (1MDB). The investigators found that hundreds of millions of dollars had been funneled into the private accounts of Najib Razak and his wife, Rosmah Mansor.
Since then, Najib has responded assertively to the accusations, with his legal representative calling the Wall Street Journal article “political sabotage” and stating that the allegations are “neither here nor there.” Meanwhile, police have launched an investigation into the source of the leaked documents and the “possibility of a conspiracy to subvert Malaysia’s democratic process and topple the prime minister,” according to Inspector General of Police Khalid Abu Bakar. The editor of the Sarawak Report also reported being harassed and stalked by people believed to be employed by United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), the ruling political party in Malaysia.

Censorship Comes Out Into the Open

The government’s censorship of the Sarawak Report is remarkable both for its unapologetic execution and for its blatant political character, but it is hardly the first time that the government or its supporters have censored Malaysia’s Internet—whether openly or less so. During the 2013 general election, strong evidence emerged of Malaysian ISPs throttling access to alternative news portals and pro-opposition content on YouTube. However, when confronted with this evidence, the MCMC denied that any such restrictions had been put in place and Instead of retyping all above - go to Newskinisimply blamed the outages on congestion.
The following year, the BBC reported on the Malaysian Prime Minister’s response to complaints about raises in the cost of basic goods and services, such as fuel and electricity—to which he responding by simply pointing out that the price of Chinese water spinach, kangkung, had lately fallen. The story went viral, spawning all manner of video parodies and image memes. Embarrassed, government ministers began to call for crackdowns on the phenomenon, only to be stymied by the government’s promise that there would be no censorship of the Internet.
Or were they? Despite the promises, users soon began to share reports about difficulties they had in attempting to access the embarrassing BBC report. Investigations by Malaysian transparency NGO Sinar Project revealed that indeed, it did appear that Malaysian ISPs were blocking or throttling access to the report. Sinar Project not only meticulously documented their findings, but they even released their tools on Github to allow others to replicate their investigation. Yet, once again, the government denied all responsibility for the outages.
Given this history, it seems highly likely that the blocking of the Sarawak Report is not the first time Malaysia has engaged in political censorship of the Internet—it is merely the first time that the government has openly admitted to it.

Legal Status of Censorship Under Malaysian Law

The MCMC has claimed that the temporary block of the Sarawak Report was carried out under the Communications and Multimedia Act of 1998, but Malaysian law does not sanction the censorship of online websites. Specifically, the MCMC referred to Sections 211 and 233 of the Act, which prohibit the provision of “content which is indecent, obscene, false, menacing, or offensive” as well as the “improper use of network facilities or network service.” However, while both of these Sections provide for fines as a penalty for violations of the law, they do not provide for blocking or taking down websites.
Though the ban reflects Malaysian authorities are increasingly finding extralegal online censorship to be within their comfort zone, the unsophisticated methods of blocking have made circumvention relatively easy for Malaysians. The Sarawak Report created a new URL, sarawak-report.org, that appears to be accessible, even as their main address, sarawakreport.org, is blocked. The block also does not appear to impact browsing from mobile devices.
Sarawak Report readers appear well-versed in circumvention practices, if the comments on the site’s Facebook page are any indication. (Readers have suggested a wide variety of VPNs, Tor, and web-based proxies to get around the block. For more on these circumvention tools, check out EFF’s Surveillance Self-Defense page on circumventing online censorship.) Yet, even poorly executed online censorship is cause for concern—especially where, as here, it seems to mark a growing willingness to bend the law when deemed to be politically expedient.
This article first appeared on Electronic Frontier Foundation and is republished here under Creative Commons license.

MCMC BLACKLIST CHECK

[rt ~]$ dig sarawakreport.org @maxis

; <<>> DiG 9.9.4-RedHat-9.9.4-18.el7_1.1 <<>> sarawakreport.org @maxis
;; global options: +cmd
;; Got answer:
;; ->>HEADER<<- 0="" 10800="" 11:52:53="" 12155="" 13="" 175.139.142.25="" 1800="" 181="" 192.168.1.254="" 1="" 2015072214="" 2015="" 23="" 2="" 300="" 3600="" 604800="" 86400="" a="" additional:="" answer:="" answer="" authority:="" authority="" cname="" dig="" flags:="" hostmaster.ns8.maxis.net.my.rpz.blacklist.maxis.com.my.="" id:="" in="" jul="" mcmc-redirect.maxis.com.my.="" msec="" msg="" noerror="" ns8.maxis.net.my.rpz.blacklist.maxis.com.my.="" opcode:="" qr="" query:="" query="" question="" ra="" rcvd:="" rd="" rpz.blacklist.maxis.com.my.="" rt="" sarawakreport.org.="" sarawakreport.org="" section:="" server:="" sgt="" size="" soa="" status:="" thu="" time:="" when:="">> DiG 9.9.4-RedHat-9.9.4-18.el7_1.1 <<>> sarawakreport.org @8.8.8.8
;; global options: +cmd
;; Got answer:
;; ->>HEADER<<- --2015-07-23="" -="" -o="" -s="" ...="" 04:04:46="" 0="" 104.20.27.161="" 104.20.28.161="" 104.20.29.161="" 104.20.30.161="" 104.20.31.161="" 108.162.205.71="" 108.162.206.71="" 11:56:45="" 11:58:41--="" 126="" 12:04:46--="" 12="" 193="" 1="" 200="" 2015="" 20a480cfdd0001cf-sin="" 22-jul-16="" 22="" 23="" 48956="" 512="" 5="" 8.8.8.8="" __cfduid="dc924bd4e0962c896db2254b5453995cc1437624286;" a="" activated="" additional:="" and="" answer:="" answer="" authority:="" awaiting="" blocking="" by="" cache-control:="" cf-ray:="" charset="UTF-8" chunked="" cloudflare-nginx="" connected.="" connecting="" connection:="" content-type:="" date:="" domain=".sarawak-report.org;" edns:="" error="" expires="Fri," flags:="" gmt="" headers.="" html="" http:="" http="" httponly="" hypen="" id:="" in="" index.html="" ip="" jul="" keep-alive="" length:="" max-age="60," msec="" msg="" noerror="" ok="" onnection="" opcode:="" opt="" path="/;" peer="" port="" pragma:="" pseudosection:="" public="" qr="" query:="" query="" question="" ra="" rcvd:="" rd="" read="" request="" reset="" resolving="" response...="" rt="" s-maxage="300" sarawakreport.org.="" saving="" section:="" sent="" server:="" set-cookie:="" sgt="" since="" size="" status:="" text="" the="" thu="" time:="" to:="" to="" transfer-encoding:="" udp:="" unspecified="" version:="" wget="" when:="" www.sarawak-report.org="" www.sarawakreport.org="">                                   ] 24,274      --.-K/s   in 0.02s   

2015-07-23 12:04:46 (1.08 MB/s) - 'index.html' saved [24274]

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