Facebook's Zuckerberg |
In response, users are about to see a more robust
Internet.org. On Monday, Facebook announced
the arrival of the Internet.org Platform, an open program for developers to
integrate their services with Internet.org. The announcement included an impassioned,
egalitarian plea from Zuckerberg himself: “Everyone is welcome to join. It’s
not exclusive to any mobile operator or company. Now, we had to start somewhere
so we launched first with partners who wanted to work with us on this mission
to connect the world, but we’ll work with anyone who wants to join us. No
company pays to be included in Internet.org. No operator is paid to offer these
services.”
Zuckerberg is working hard to rebrand Internet.org as a
place for everyone because he knows it is anything but. Internet.org has a long
list of requirements for compatibility: content, for example, cannot utilize
JavaScript, video or large images (yes, this goes for Facebook too).
Furthermore, the fine print on Internet.org’s submission page clearly
states, “Submission and/or approval by Facebook does not guarantee that your
site(s) will be made available through Internet.org.” Internet.org may be about
to expand its offerings, but Facebook remains very much in control of what
those offerings will be.
Of greater consequence, Internet.org is completely
unencrypted, save for its Android App. Services submitted with SSL/TLS/HTTPS
will be relegated to the aforementioned app; Internet.org as it exists via any
other platform has no regard for user privacy.
Users should not underestimate the significance of this
fact. Zuckerberg has positioned Internet.org as the only available web
connection for two-thirds of the world’s population and he takes no responsibility in providing a secure, private
connection along with it. The developed world, on the verge of accepting
encryption as the smart and safe approach to the internet, has given its
neighbors a no win situation—either use Internet.org and let Facebook track
your every move while you hand your financial information to hackers, or don’t
touch the internet at all. Even the service’s technical guidelines admit that
this is a problem deserving of a solution; if Zuckerberg were guided by the
humanitarian aims he claims, he would not ask the majority of the world’s
population to forego their rights to privacy.
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