Internet Fragmentation > National Gateways
National Gateways
What happens when the Internet has borders?
In an open, global Internet, networks are free to interconnect with other networks across geopolitical borders. This is why you can easily use services that are based in countries other than the one you live in. But if traffic has to run through government mandated gateways, this can become difficult, or even impossible, affecting the user experience and undermining the network itself.
Why Does It Matter?
Internet exchange points are places where networks come together to exchange traffic from different sources. They help traffic flow freely across geographies. A national gateway uses these exchanges as digital checkpoints, where a government can block, throttle, or filter that traffic.
In 2021, Cambodia issued a decree that required all Internet traffic in Cambodia to be rerouted through the National Internet Gateway (NIG) by February 2022. The plans remain delayed, but if it’s implemented, it will not only affect Cambodia, but also the networks that interconnect with Cambodian networks. This could affect traffic within the region.
This decree also says that ISPs must retain all traffic data for 12 months, and are required to report activity to the government in a way that’s traceable to specific individuals. This could include financial transactions, visiting certain websites deemed a threat to the government, or even your location data.
The Cambodian government says this will bolster national security and help crack down on tax fraud. But the impact on Cambodian network connections will affect anyone who connects with those networks, which could have serious consequences for social and economic life, as well as potentially endanger free expression.
Threat category:
Regulation of infrastructure
Fragmentation risk:
Proliferation of national gateways
Affected region(s):
Cambodia

Learn More
How does Internet fragmentation affect you?
Read our explainer and learn about other policies and proposals that put the open Internet at risk.