The Evolution of Digital Rights in the Middle East and North Africa: From Optimism to Tech Accountability
The Arab Spring sparked optimism about the internet's potential, but subsequent years have brought a more pragmatic understanding of digital defense. This article explores the evolution of the digital rights movement in the Middle East and North Africa, highlighting key organizations and the challenges they face.
The Arab Spring was defined by optimism about the internet's potential, but the years since have been marked by a more sober understanding of what it takes to defend it.
Back in 2011, the term “digital rights” was still fairly new. While in the decades prior, open source and hacker communities—as well as a handful of organizations including **EFF**—had advocated for digital freedoms, it was through the merging of disparate communities from around the world in the 2000s that digital rights came to be more clearly understood as an extension of fundamental human rights.
In 2011, we observed that there were only a few organizations focused on digital rights in the region. Groups like [Nawaat](https://nawaat.org/), which emerged from the Tunisian diaspora under the Ben Ali regime; the [Arab Digital Expression Foundation](https://home.adef.xyz/), formed to promote the creative use of technology; and [SMEX](https://smex.org/), which was initially created to teach journalists and others about social media but has grown to become a powerful force in the region, led the way. Since that time, dozens of organizations have emerged throughout the region to promote freedom of expression, innovation, privacy, and digital security.
Understanding how the digital rights movement evolved in the Middle East and North Africa requires a closer look at the communities that shaped it, and the organizations that are carrying on the fight today. Perspectives from people and organizations that were key to these efforts offer critical insight into how the movement has grown and what challenges lie ahead.
**Reem Almasri**, a senior researcher and digital sovereignty consultant, says that:
> ‘Digital rights’ emerged as a term around the Arab Spring, when the internet was still a fairly unregulated space, we were still trying to figure out the tech companies’ policies, and force governments to look at the internet as a fundamental right like water and electricity.
>
> But then the need to converge digital rights to everyday rights—economic, political, social rights—and to connect it to geopolitics has started to be thought about, and to be in discussion as well. And to not look at digital rights as a separate field from everything else that’s affecting it, from the geopolitical context.
**Mohamad Najem**, who co-founded **SMEX** in 2008 and has led it to become the largest organization in the region, told me that, at the time, “Nobody gave [social media] a lot of attention in our region.” Their work was “a positive approach to social media, how we can democratize sharing information, how we can share more from civil society, change people’s minds, et cetera.”
“After that phase,” he continues, “we can think about 2012-2013—after the Arab Spring, as an organization we started looking at the infrastructure of the internet, and how freedom of expression and privacy are affected. That’s when we started looking more at what we call digital rights.”
### Towards Tech Accountability
In the aftermath of the Arab Spring, social media companies moved from a largely hands-off approach to governance toward more formalized—and often opaque—content moderation systems. Platforms expanded their trust and safety teams and began working more closely with civil society through trusted partnerships in the region and globally. But, **Mohamad Najem** says:
> After the expansion of tech accountability itself and the adaptation of tech companies, we’ve noticed that it’s not taking us anywhere. Gradually we’ve come to a new phase where it feels like tech accountability is an economy by itself that is not leading to real results. So the next phase for us at least and maybe for others in global majority communities is how we can focus on digital public good, how we can push more governments, private and public institutions to adopt more open source software, to look at the ecosystem and understand the US threats happening now, et cetera.
Another group that has played a key role in the fight for digital rights and tech accountability in the region is [7amleh](https://7amleh.org/), a Palestinian organization that was founded in 2013. At the time, says [Jalal Abukhater](https://ishr.ch/defender-stories/human-rights-defenders-storyjalal-abukhater-from-palestine/):
> [I]t was unique and interesting in Palestinian society to have a human rights organization dedicated fully to the topic of digital rights, you know, human rights in a digital format. However, with the years, we saw various milestones, we saw progress of policy decisions and movements through the Israeli government to influence content moderation in Big Tech companies. We saw problems there as an organization.
>
> 7amleh took a leading stance in fighting to preserve the digital rights of Palestinians during a period where there was a very strong influence through the Israeli government. There was actually quite important reporting coming through 7amleh on the situation of online content moderation at a time when it wasn’t really a topic being discussed but it was very clearly a situation where there was major influence by government and political suppression happening as a result.
### An Ever-Expanding Ecosystem
While in the early days, the digital rights movement attracted specialists, today, people from other fields have recognized how digital rights intersect with their work, and the digital rights community has embraced them.
**Almasri** says:
> Because the digital rights movement has been decentralizing and has stopped being a speciality, it stopped being an exclusive thing for digital rights specialists, since of course the internet not only in the Arab region but all over the world has become a fundamental infrastructure for running any kind of sensitive operations, or operations in general…all types of organizations, and companies, and initiatives are thinking about their digital security, about how internet laws are affecting the use of the internet, or putting them at risk, and how surveillance technologies are affecting their operations.
**Abukhater** credits the collaborative work that emerged within the region over the years in building the movement’s strength:
> [Today], civil society and digital civil society have many forums, many coalitions and networks, but it’s always important to remember that this is work that builds over many years of experience, and relationships, and networks—that it’s different parties coming to support each other at different phases to ensure that this kind of work succeeds and that this ecosystem is sustained globally with support from partner organizations which were very crucial in ensuring that this ecosystem is sustained, especially in Palestine.
### Growing Collaborations
Conferences like [Bread and Net](https://breadandnet.org/), first held in Beirut in 2018, and the [Palestine Digital Activism Forum](https://7amleh.org/post/pdaf-2026-en) (PDAF), first held in Ramallah in 2017, bring activists, academics, journalists, and other practitioners together to network and learn about each other’s work. The pandemic, conflict, and other barriers haven’t stopped either conference from carrying on: PDAF has become an annual virtual event that draws big-name speakers, while Bread & Net has spaced out its meetings but continues to draw bigger crowds each time.
**Almasri** credits these meetings with expanding the movement beyond the traditional techies and activists who first got involved. “You see a wide spectrum of different fields. You see artists, archivists, journalists joining these conversations, which is definitely on the brighter side of things when it comes to this field, or this scene.”
She also credits the emergence of alliances such as the [Middle East Alliance for Digital Rights](https://madr.network/) (**MADR**, of which **EFF** is a member), founded in 2020 by [individuals and organizations](https://madr.network/about-us/) who had been working together for many years to formalize those collaborations.
“Other than the collaborations at the advocacy level, [MADR] creates a sort of pressure point on Big Tech, on content moderation policies, allows for certain coordination at the level of the UN, et cetera, which I see as really positive because it brings some of the redundant efforts together and helps decide on priorities.”
### Looking Forward
In thinking about the future of the movement, **Almasri** and **Najem** agree that digital rights are no longer a niche. In **Najem’s** words, “It’s about everything else…it’s about everything.”
**Almasri** adds:
> [W]hen it comes to priorities, things that this scene has been working on, I feel that October 7 [2023] was a big turning point in the way that