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http://wsws.org/articles/2003/mar2003/inte-m28_prn.shtml


WSWS : News & Analysis : The Internet & Computerization

War coverage takes over as top Internet search

By Mike Ingram
28 March 2003

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“War” has taken over “sex”, “Britney Spears” and “travel” as the top
Internet search term since the US and British forces commenced their
bombardment of Iraq.

Given the global, 24-hour character of the Internet the rise in numbers
looking for news on the latest developments in Iraq is hardly surprising.
That alone does not account for the increase, however, which more
fundamentally expresses the frustration of millions of people with official
news outlets. Their unashamed regurgitation of government propaganda
forces people to search for other news sources outside of the usual
channels.

The UK Internet Service Provider (ISP), Freeserve, which tracks daily
changes in popular search terms, said that over the weekend of March 22-
23, the term “war” outranked previous favourites.

According to the ISP, news sites are seeing a huge increase in traffic as
people look for the latest information on Iraq. Some sites are recording
more than two to three times more visitors than normal. According to
Comscore Media Metrix, traffic to the top 15 news sites has increased by
more than 40 percent.

Yahoo! is experiencing the same trend with “Iraq” claiming the top place
in its search index. The war now generates more interest than music and
basketball, with searches involving military technology also on the
increase.

Keynote Systems, which tracks how long it takes web users to access
sites, said that the Internet and the web as a whole were not showing any
major problems, but the company did find accessing some sites difficult.
The web sites of the US Navy and US Airforce, and the British Home Office
could not be accessed for several hours last week and the sites of CNN
and MSBNC were down for a few minutes after the US attack began, but
quickly recovered. Other sites affected included the London Times and
Jerusalem Post, which suffered from performance degradation, according
to Keynote.

The responsiveness of BBC News Online suffered during the busy lunchtime
period with average download times rising from 0.47 seconds to 1.88
seconds and ITV News saw average download times increase from 5.66
seconds to 15.84 seconds.

The Arabic-language satellite station Al Jazeera which broadcast Saddam
Hussein’s address in full following the start of bombing last week has also
had problems. Its web page took 240 seconds to load the night war
commenced.

Akamai Technologies distributes data from leading news sites. On March
19, Akamai had its largest spike ever with traffic to clients reaching 370,000
hits per second, up from the previous peak of 290,000 which was attained
earlier in the week. According to president Paul Sagan, Akamai added large
amounts of data storage and transmission capacity to the network in
anticipation of an increase in Internet usage during the war. The company
claims it could easily handle a tenfold increase in traffic. Customers
include CNN, Yahoo! and MSNBC.

Yahoo!’ s news site—which established itself by allowing submissions from
independent news sources—saw about three times more traffic than it
would in a typical hour directly after President George W. Bush’s speech
announcing that the US had launched war on Iraq, according to
spokeswoman Joanna Stevens.

Stevens said surfers were also using more targeted searches after Bush’s
speech. The top search terms on Yahoo! in the 15 minutes after the
speech were: Iraq, George W. Bush, world map, Ari Fleischer, Saddam
Hussein and war, she said.

In the Gulf War of 1991, governments relied on the self-censorship
practised by the official media to prevent working people from learning
the truth about the war. Twelve years on the same media is even more
craven in its parroting of the lies emanating from Washington and Downing
Street. But their ability to chloroform public opinion has been seriously
undermined with the emergence of the Internet and the World Wide Web
as a mass medium.

Of most concern to the British and US governments is the fact that the
Internet is not simply a repository for news and information but an active
tool of communication and organisation. The emergence of thousands of
antiwar sites and mailing lists has aided the co-ordination of protest
actions on an international scale.







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