“The Net interprets censorship as damage and routes around it.” – John Gilmore, Time Magazine 6th December 1993
This quote – made almost 16 years ago – sums up in a nutshell why I love the internet sometimes.
As is obvious from the ongoing events this morning that the law firm Carter-Ruck didn’t really understand just how badly it was going to shoot itself in the foot when it gagged the Guardian newspaper in an attempt to prevent them reporting on open questions asked in parliament.
These questions referred to the Minton Report regarding illegal toxic waste dumping.
I guess we should really thank them, because had they not done I wouldn’t have this delicious feeling of schadenfreude as thousands of people find out about their client Trafigura illegally dumping toxic waste off the Ivory Coast, in possibly the largest toxic waste scandal of the 21st century.
The story broke this morning, and has been widely circulated around blogs and twitter, passed around like a note in a giant electronic classroom (Interestingly, at time of writing at least, the BBC have not picked up the story. Make of that what you will).
The internet is people (as my esteemed friend says so often), and when people are connected secrets become much harder to keep, and cover-ups much harder to orchestrate.
People power ftw.
Update: The gag order on the Guardian has been lifted shortly before they were due to appear in the high court.
Could the shitestorm generated could possibly have something to do with it..?