I am a little skeptic that this fine imposed is because the government truly believes in Internet freedom. Many factions of the Egyptian government was to get as much money out of Mubarak as they can and this might be a way to do just that. What would be interesting is if there is a law passed preventing any member of the government from cutting off Internet access. Zaid On May 28, 2011, at 12:23 PM, ML wrote:
On 5/28/2011 12:18 PM, Marshall Eubanks wrote:
I remember some discussion of this outage on NANOG, and on what it was costing Egypt. Well, here is an estimate - almost $ 20 million USD / day (which actually sounds low to me).
Regards Marshall
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/africa/2011/05/201152811555458677.html
An Egyptian court has fined ousted president Hosni Mubarak and former officials more than $90m for cutting off access to internet and mobile phone services during the country's massive protests in January.
A court source told the Reuters news agency on Saturday that Mubarak's fine is $34m, former interior minister Habib al-Adly will owe $53m, and former prime minister Ahmed Nazif has a fine of $7m.
The fine is to be paid from personal assets...
Can I fine TEDATA for committing VoIP fraud against my network during that same time period?