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Iran tightens online censorship

8/6/2009 by: Thomas Jørgen Jacobsen - Get more from this author


In the midst of a troubled [since the presidential election, ed.] Iran, the police have begun to physically remove and destroy satellite receivers within residential homes. This is done in a massive effort to prevent people from obtaining  news with foreign TV-stations, which are outside the Iranian regime's control.

That is the report of a German human rights organization, saying that Iranian citizens now only have the Internet as an impartial source of information - and that this media is also subject to very strict censorship.

Every internet provider in Iran has been linked to the rest of the world through a central hub inside the National Iranian telecommunications company, TCI. There, an ingenious system has been installed to keep track of all user's movements through cyberspace, recording the electronic communication and allowing to block any unwanted content.

Thus a few words in an e-mail can quickly lead to the police knocking on the door. At current it is believed that at least 41 journalists, four bloggers and a French student are imprisoned in Iran due to having sent pictures and news about the desperate political situation in the country.

In neighboring Iraq, the government has also commented on its own plans to introduce Internet censorship. Iraq apparently seeks to block access to pornographic and other objectionable content, gambling and pages with extreme political views. All public internet cafes in Iraq will also be forced to register themselves through the upcoming centralized hub.

All in all, Internet access is being censored in more and more countries around the globe, in both the Northern and Southern hemisphere - we know that Internet access is censored in Great Britain, Germany, China, Australia and so on - and the trend will unfortunately, continue. So if you live in a country that doesn't have Internet censors, count your blessings.


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Comments:

Sourcing please? by: Anonymous on 8/12/2009
You are quoting "a German human rights organization"? Very bad form if you ask me.

For the sake of their copyright, and for the sake of researchers like me, PLEASE add some sources of you story. This is really not professional.
rotten deal by: Anonymous on 8/10/2009
People are very angry about Nokia Siemens Network (NSN) deal with Iran over censorship systems. Iranian People have boycotted Nokia products since they found out about the censorship deal and blame Nokia for arrest of journalists, bloggers and Mousavi campaigners because that censorship system gave Iranian authorities ability to eavesdrop on phone and internet communication systems.

Thanks for covering this story, I hope by covering these kinds of stories corporations come to their senses that dealing with totalitarian regimes might profit them in short term but in long term they will lose people's trust and the bigger market share at the end.

Fariborz Shamshiri
www.rottengods.com
by: Anonymous on 8/8/2009
What are they afraid of? Their own people? Any government that fears its people's right to access and exchange information is illegitimate.

And desperately weak.
Iran is 1984; only worse. by: Anonymous on 8/6/2009
Every person is innocent, until proved guilty. In Iran it's the opposite. Every person is guilty, until proved innocent. I want to make it clear, that is a fact.
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