Posted: October 26, 2009 03:29 AM
A Nomad on the Web, Forbidden to Host My Blog in Cuba
How I wish Generation Y could have one of the ".cu" domains indicating
its origin within this country. I would give my mouse and half another
one to go to an office and say, "Please, Miss, I have come to have my
blog hosted on a server within this island." But that possibility is
forbidden to Cubans, because here the State is not only the sole owner
of all the factories, schools, stores and garbage cans, but also the
absolute master of the cyberspace parcel where we belong.
Only official institutions can have one of the web addresses that point
to this "island of the disconnected." The same political filter that
determines if a person can travel, buy a car or graduate from a
university, works when a national URL is acquired. Hence, to own a
domestic site is more a sign of submission than of national bona fides,
an unmistakable clue announcing that the state is behind certain
publications. So I prefer to count myself among the group of the
"undocumented on the web," those of us who have managed to construct a
hiding place far from those rigid taskmasters.
I had wanted to develop this thesis of our indigence as netsurfers at
the Palace of Conventions last week, during the FELAFACS* event. The
meeting had that air of debate that surfaces when foreigners are
invited. However, it excluded those who - in our own backyard - have
different opinions. A paper presented from Brazil titled, "Generation Y
and Cyberspace Nomadism: Reflections on Ways of Thinking in the Digital
Era," by the academics Angela Schaun and Leonel Aguiar, was read by
their colleague Jose Mauricio Conrado Moreira da Silva. An esteemed
university professor criticized the speaker, reminding him that GY is
located outside Cuba. What he did not say, because the omission is the
wrapping that encloses the lie, is that only in this way can it exist,
only from afar can a citizen have her own space for opinions.
As a fugitive with a taste of the virtual mountain, I cannot now return
to the stocks, whips and shackles. One day my blog will be found on a
server on this Island and, believe me, it will not be because it has
performed an ideological pirouette.
* XIII Latin American Meeting of Faculties of Social Communication.
Yoani Sanchez: A Nomad on the Web, Forbidden to Host My Blog in Cuba (26
October 2009)
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/yoani-sanchez/a-nomad-on-the-web-forbid_b_333382.html
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