标题: 美国将推出平台,旨在绕过中国、伊朗及其他地区的互联网审查
副标题: 随着威权政权加强对网络空间的控制,常务副部长莎拉·罗杰斯领导数字自由倡议
作者: 摩根·菲利普斯
福克斯新闻
发布时间: 2026年2月20日 美国东部时间下午4:49
福克斯新闻独家报道: 美国国务院已敲定一款新的隐私保护应用,旨在让全球用户能够访问官员所称的、与美国人相同的无审查互联网,即使是在中国和伊朗等对网络镇压严格的国家,以及欧洲加强内容监管的地区。
据福克斯新闻数字频道了解,该平台Freedom.gov将在”未来几周”推出。
它将作为一款一键式桌面和移动应用程序运行,兼容iOS和Android设备。
[马可·卢比奥担忧美国人访问欧洲时可能因社交媒体帖子被逮捕]
该应用是开源的,并内置匿名保护功能。
这一举措正值全球各国政府加强对数字言论的控制之际,从中国的”防火长城”到伊朗大规模的互联网关闭,以及欧洲新的监管制度。美国官员表示,Freedom.gov旨在提供一种技术制衡手段——将他们所说的美国开放互联网模式推广给生活在审查制度下的用户。
“为确保完全透明,我们将Freedom.gov设计为完全开源。但我们也确保它完全匿名,”一名国务院官员表示,”任何人都可以查看它的工作原理。包括我们在内,没有人能够追踪或识别你。”
据该官员称,该应用不会记录IP地址、会话数据、浏览活动、DNS查询或可用于识别用户身份的设备标识符。
该应用的底层技术结构的具体细节尚未披露。
拥有复杂审查系统的政府历史上迅速采取行动,阻止或将规避工具定为犯罪。当局可以限制应用下载、封锁域名、限制流量或对用户施加处罚。
Freedom.gov在高度受限制环境中的可访问性,可能取决于其技术架构和适应反制措施的能力。
这一倡议由负责公共外交的常务副部长莎拉·罗杰斯领导,她负责国务院数字自由办公室。
“Freedom.gov是国务院为保护和促进线上线下基本自由而进行的又一系列努力中的最新一项,”罗杰斯表示,”该项目将具有全球范围,但使命具有鲜明的美国特色:在我们迎来建国250周年之际,纪念我们对言论自由的承诺。”
路透社此前曾报道,美国国务院正在开发Freedom.gov平台。
此次推出正值全球互联网治理领域的斗争日益激烈,欧洲及其他地区的各国政府正加强对在线内容的控制。
[谷歌决定撤回拜登政府时期对YouTube账号的禁令,被 hailed 为言论自由的’重大进展’]
在欧洲,监管机构根据旨在监管数字平台的新法律加强了监督。欧盟《数字服务法案》扩大了政府对主要平台的权力,并要求删除包括仇恨言论和极端主义材料在内的非法内容,监管机构有权对违规行为处以高额罚款。
在英国,《在线安全法案》对平台提出了处理有害和非法内容的新义务,并对某些服务包括年龄验证要求。批评人士警告称,这些措施可能助长激进的内容删除,并扩大政府对线上合法言论的影响。
在其他地方,限制措施更为直接。俄罗斯最近下令禁止WhatsApp,进一步巩固了国家对数字通信的控制。
中国拥有世界上最复杂的在线审查系统,即广为人知的”防火长城”,封锁外国新闻媒体和社交媒体平台,同时推广国家控制的数字生态系统。
伊朗在动荡时期多次实施大规模互联网关闭。在抗议期间,政府的断电措施切断了公民与全球通信的联系。
[点击此处下载福克斯新闻应用]
《华尔街日报》此前报道称,在一次断电后,数千台星链卫星互联网终端被秘密带入该国,这一行动得到美国支持,旨在帮助异见人士绕过审查。
伊朗当局试图干扰卫星信号,并将持有此类设备定为犯罪。卫星连接——不依赖国内电信基础设施——已成为关闭期间少数可行的生命线之一。
State Department launches Freedom.gov website for global digital freedom | Fox News
Title: US to unveil platform aiming to bypass internet censorship in China, Iran and beyond
Under Secretary Sarah Rogers leads digital freedom initiative as authoritarian regimes tighten grip on online spaces
By Morgan Phillips
Fox News
Published February 20, 2026 4:49pm EST
FIRST ON FOX: The State Department has finalized a new privacy-preserving app intended to give users worldwide access to what officials describe as the same uncensored internet available to Americans, even in countries with strict online repression such as China and Iran and as Europe enacts tighter content oversight.
The platform, Freedom.gov, will roll out “in the coming weeks,” Fox News Digital has learned.
It will operate as a one-click desktop and mobile application compatible with iOS and Android devices.
[MARCO RUBIO VOICES CONCERN THAT AMERICANS MAY SOMEDAY BE ARRESTED FOR SOCIAL MEDIA POSTS WHEN VISITING EUROPE]
The app is open-source and includes built-in anonymity protections.
The initiative comes as governments worldwide tighten control over digital speech, from China’s “Great Firewall” to sweeping internet shutdowns in Iran and new regulatory regimes in Europe. U.S. officials say Freedom.gov is designed to offer a technological counterweight — exporting what they describe as America’s open internet model to users living under censorship.
“In the interest of total transparency, we made Freedom.gov completely open-source. But we also made it completely anonymous,” a State Department official said. “Anyone can see how it works. No one, including us, can track or identify you.”
According to the official, the application does not log IP addresses, session data, browsing activity, DNS queries or device identifiers that could be used to personally identify users.
Specific details about the app’s underlying technical structure were not disclosed.
Governments with sophisticated censorship systems historically have moved quickly to block or criminalize circumvention tools. Authorities can restrict app downloads, block domains, throttle traffic or impose penalties on users.
Whether Freedom.gov maintains accessibility in heavily restricted environments may depend on its technical architecture and its ability to adapt to countermeasures.
The initiative is being led by Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy Sarah Rogers, who oversees the State Department’s Digital Freedom office.
“Freedom.gov is the latest in a long line of efforts by the State Department to protect and promote fundamental freedoms, both online and offline,” Rogers said. “The project will be global in its scope, but distinctly American in its mission: commemorating our commitment to free expression as we approach our 250th birthday.”
Reuters previously reported that the State Department was developing the Freedom.gov platform.
The rollout comes amid intensifying global battles over internet governance, as governments across Europe and beyond move to assert greater control over online content.
[GOOGLE’S DECISION TO WALK BACK BIDEN-ERA YOUTUBE ACCOUNT BANS HAILED AS ‘HUGE DEVELOPMENT’ FOR FREE SPEECH]
In Europe, regulators have tightened oversight under new laws aimed at policing digital platforms. The European Union’s Digital Services Act expands government authority over major platforms and requires removal of illegal content, including hate speech and extremist material, with regulators empowered to impose steep fines for violations.
In the United Kingdom, the Online Safety Act imposes new obligations on platforms to address harmful and illegal content and includes age-verification requirements for certain services. Critics warn the measures risk incentivizing aggressive content removal and expanding government influence over lawful speech online.
Elsewhere, restrictions have been more direct. Russia recently moved to ban WhatsApp, further consolidating state control over digital communications.
China maintains the world’s most sophisticated online censorship system, widely known as the “Great Firewall,” blocking foreign news outlets and social media platforms while promoting a state-controlled digital ecosystem.
Iran repeatedly has imposed sweeping internet shutdowns during periods of unrest. During protests, government blackouts have cut citizens off from global communications.
[CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP]
The Wall Street Journal previously reported that thousands of Starlink satellite internet terminals were covertly brought into the country following a blackout, in an effort backed by the United States to help dissidents bypass censorship.
Iranian authorities have attempted to jam satellite signals and criminalized possession of such equipment. Satellite connectivity — which does not rely on domestic telecommunications infrastructure — has emerged as one of the few viable lifelines during shutdowns.
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