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If you surf the internet in Cuba, you can be pretty sure a government spy is watching you.

Private internet connections are banned, forcing most people into internet cafes where software monitors their every click, according to a report by Reporters Without Borders (RSF) on 19 October. Cafe users must also hand over their name and address.

While few websites are blocked outright, if a user types in a potentially subversive word, the name of a known dissident, say, a pop-up appears saying the document has been blocked for “state security reasons”, and the application shuts down. “The authorities control…

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