2020-alharbi-opening
findings extracted from this paper
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Filtering rules in Saudi Arabia were uniform across all three major ISPs (STC, Zain, Mobily) and six vantage points spanning four geographically distributed cities (Riyadh, Jeddah, Makkah, Al-Khobar), indicating a single centralized national filtering infrastructure rather than per-ISP implementation.
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Saudi Arabia's blocking decisions closely track diplomatic ruptures: Qatari news sites were blocked in 2017 amid the Gulf crisis, Iranian news sites in 2018 following severed diplomatic relations, and Turkish outlets Anadolu and TRT Arabic in April 2020 amid Ankara–Riyadh tensions — the Turkish blocks were partly triggered by a citizen Twitter campaign calling for the block.
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Internet filtering in Saudi Arabia is implemented primarily as HTTP URL-keyword filtering augmented by TLS-level (SNI) filtering for HTTPS connections; DNS and IP-level failures were minimal and consistent with transient network issues rather than deliberate blocking. In 2019, 82.2% of Adult, 7.6% of Shopping, and 6.2% of Games websites returned HTTP 403; TLS filtering of Shopping sites decreased from 9.6% to 6.6% between 2018 and 2020.
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Saudi Arabia progressively unblocked VoIP and messaging applications after 2017: all 18 tested apps were blocked during 2013–2017, 67% were accessible in 2018, 93% in 2019, and all except WeChat in 2020, following CITC's 2017 announcement lifting the ban on compliant applications.