Recap: 12 Stories of Egypt in Turmoil


As the uprising in Egypt enters its sixth night, social media is active all over the world, and to a much lesser extent, inside of Egypt itself.

The government has officially shut down the Internet in Egypt, bringing the information flow from the country to a trickle. However, resourceful Twitter and Facebook users are still managing to get tweets and SMS messages out of the country using clever methods.

Why is there an uprising going on in Egypt? Egyptians are rebelling against the nearly 30-year reign of President Mosni Mubarak and the government corruption associated with his regime. The countrys troubles include a lack of jobs and poor living conditions, and the protesters charge the ruling elite with squandering the countrys resources. They want Mubarak out.

Weve been clos! ely watc hing the social media aspects of this revolution since it began, and in case you missed our coverage, heres a recap:

8-Year-Old Girl Lectures Egypts Mubarak on YouTube [VIDEO]

Twitter Declares, The Tweets Must Flow

BlackBerry Service Restored in Cairo? [UPDATED]

Visualizing Egypts Internet Blackout [GRAPHIC]

Facebook & Twitter Both Blocked in Egypt

Leaders React to Communication Blackout at World Economic Forum in Davos [VIDEO]

How Users in Egypt Are Bypassing Twitter & Facebook Blocks

Internet Reportedly Down in Syria

The Twitterverse Responds to Protests in Egypt [STATS]

Twitter Blocked in Egypt As Protests Turn Violent

YouTube, Flickr Show Escalating Violence in Egyptian Protests

Internet Access & SMS Blocked in Egypt as Protests Escalate

More About: Egypt, facebook, Internet shutdown, Political, Revolution, twitter, Uprising

For more Social Media coverage:


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

12 startup founders discuss working on Christmas Day

Flipboard needs to branch its content out from US/UK, heres why

Digitimes: Apples iPhone 5 to include smaller screen and metal chassis