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arabiyyah
02-26-2007, 09:13 PM
Iran targets dissent on the net
By Clark Boyd
In Boston


The web in Iran has emerged as a source of information for voters, who are choosing a new president in a run-off election.


Blogs, especially those in Farsi, are being targeted
But what Iranians can or cannot see online depends largely on their government

And the authorities are increasingly tightening controls over the net, says a study out this week.

The report on internet filtering in Iran was written by The OpenNet Initiative, a partnership of researchers in the US, Britain and Canada.

The bulk of the study's technical work was done by one of the partners, The Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto.

Since last November, the Lab has been using computers inside and outside of Iran to determine what kind of content the Iranian government is blocking, and how it is blocking that content.

Dissident targets

The Lab's Director of Technical Research, Nart Villeneuve, says he and his team tested more than 1,000 web addresses.

Some of what they found is not surprising. For example, the Iranian government is blocking pornographic sites, and other sites with sexual content.

There's a market for censorship technology out there, it's a growing market, and we're seeing it being filled

Nart Villeneuve, Citizen Lab
But according to Mr Villeneuve, the Iranian government's filtering goes far beyond that.

"Iran is definitely targeting dissident groups," he said.

"The Communist Party of Iran, mujahideen groups outside of Iran, sites talking about the monarchy, news outlets like the Voice of America, things like that are being targeted in Iran."

The study also notes that weblogs, particularly those in Farsi, are being targeted by the Iranian government, as well as websites that provide tools or tips in how to get around internet filtering.

"If you want to block some content and get into the censorship game, then you have to start blocking other avenues users can use to get around it," said Mr Villeneuve.

Filtering technology

Unlike China, which filters content in a centralised way at the national level, the Iranian government relies on the country's various internet service providers to assist with its censorship.


The more traditional way of finding out about the elections
In Iran, those internet service providers are not using sophisticated technology to do this.

They are using SmartFilter, commercially available filtering software produced by a US company called Secure Computing.

SmartFilter, according to the Secure Computing website, comes with a database of millions of blockable web addresses, in more than 60 categories.

Mr Villeneuve said a user, like the Iranian government, can take that commercial list, and then add sites it wants to block for political reasons.

"There's a market for censorship technology out there, it's a growing market, and we're seeing it being filled," he said.

"There are companies out there that develop these products, and they're being used not only in your local library, or parents trying to protect their children.

"We're seeing this same technology used at the country level, used to block web content for political reasons. And that's pretty scary."

'Illegal use'

Secure Computing did not agree to an interview but issued a statement saying that it "has sold no licenses to any entity in Iran," and that use of its software in Iran has been done without its consent.

Secure Computing also said it was actively taking steps to stop what it called this illegal use of their products.

The company maintains that it is "fully complying with the export laws, policies and regulations of the United States".

"I take them at their word,- that they are 'shocked to find gambling going on in this establishment,' to quote from the movie Casablanca," said Jonathan Zittrain co-director of Harvard Law School's Berkman Center for Internet and Society, one of groups who helped write the Iran report.

"But the fact remains that the software has been in use for an extended period of time there. And we've seen Secure Computing software turn up in more than just Iran. We've seen it in Saudi Arabia as well," he said.

Guessing game

Ultimately, Mr Zittrain said, it is not very productive to single out Secure Computing.

He notes that Microsoft took heat recently when it was revealed that its Chinese blogging tool was helping the Chinese government filter words such as democracy and freedom.

Companies making filtering software, Mr Zittrain says, now have a chance to stop and think about the way their products are used in countries such as Iran and China.

"I think there's a spectrum ranging from providing steel to a regime, to providing them with finished bullets, to providing them with execution services, where at some point you say, 'we're not going to do it'."

The OpenNet Initiative's report indicates that Iran's internet filtering regime continues to grow more extensive, more sophisticated, and more precise in its focus on local websites.

And that, the report concludes, is sure to keep Iranian web-surfers guessing as to exactly what, on a day-to-day basis, they will be allowed to see.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/4123788.stm
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wilberhum
02-26-2007, 09:18 PM
Friday, 24 June, 2005, 01:57
No new.
Iran has repressed freespeach since the revolution.
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Philosopher
02-26-2007, 09:18 PM
Iran is a coward nation. This is why they are blocking freedom of speech. I understand they should block porn, but why are they blocking sites like BBC and IslamicBoard??
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Philosopher
02-26-2007, 09:19 PM
format_quote Originally Posted by wilberhum
No new.
Iran has repressed freespeach since the revolution.
lol
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wilberhum
02-26-2007, 09:20 PM
format_quote Originally Posted by Philosopher
Iran is a coward nation. This is why they are blocking freedom of speech. I understand they should block porn, but why are they blocking sites like BBC and IslamicBoard??
Why? Because freedom of speach is not part of there agenda.
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arabiyyah
02-26-2007, 09:22 PM
they block islamicboard????? i thought that was just a rumor! why block us? :(
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Philosopher
02-26-2007, 09:24 PM
format_quote Originally Posted by arabiyyah
they block islamicboard????? i thought that was just a rumor! why block us? :(
Yeah they blocked us because they dont like comments made by people like wilberhum.
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wilberhum
02-26-2007, 09:35 PM
format_quote Originally Posted by Philosopher
Yeah they blocked us because they dont like comments made by people like wilberhum.
Ya, I'm one of those really terrorable people that like freedoms. :laugh: :laugh:

Or maybe it is because of all the people that claim they are not Islamic.
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Philosopher
02-26-2007, 09:36 PM
format_quote Originally Posted by wilberhum
Ya, I'm one of those really terrorable people that like freedoms. :laugh: :laugh:
Love for freedom is shared among all humans.
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wilberhum
02-26-2007, 09:37 PM
format_quote Originally Posted by Philosopher
Love for freedom is shared among all humans.
All humans, Yes. All governments, No.
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AvarAllahNoor
02-26-2007, 09:38 PM
format_quote Originally Posted by wilberhum
Ya, I'm one of those really terrorable people that like freedoms. :laugh: :laugh:

Or maybe it is because of all the people that claim they are not Islamic.
I know this is nothing to do with the topic, but I do find your mispelling a crime in itself! - I know you're american, but can you at least spell correctly Please - Sorry if I cause offence! :D
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Philosopher
02-26-2007, 09:40 PM
format_quote Originally Posted by wilberhum
All humans, Yes. All governments, No.
Almost all governments would love to restrict freedoms.
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rebelishaulman
02-27-2007, 02:29 AM
That is to bad.
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Woodrow
02-27-2007, 02:52 AM
When does a loss of freedom become justified and when is it tyrannical?

When The second human was created, half of the first human's freedoms were compromised. So it has been throughout the course of mankind. All which I see as my freedoms and rights reduce the rights and freedoms of another person and vice versa.

All of life is a compromise with our fellow humans if we are to survive. If I am to survive you must give up some of your freedoms. If you are to survive I must give up some of my freedoms. For both of us to survive we both must agree to give up some freedoms.

This has to be agreed upon by each and every group. The other option is isolation from each other. The question then becomes do we isolate as individuals, families, communities, nations, religions, ethnicity or? or a combination. Keep in mind each time we expand our range of contacts the more of our freedoms we lose or compromise. The again to retain isolation we have to sacrifice some freedoms too.

Does a country have a right to impose restrictions on it's citizens in order to maintain it's internal stability. What if the people agree to it? What if the people will tolerate it in order to remain as free citizens.

At what point can we say what Iran does internally is unjustified? Do they have a right to their own national security? If control of the media is necessary for their national security is it justified.

I don't think we have the right to make any judgments or come to any conclusions unless we live there and are privy to the plans of the national powers.
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Akil
02-27-2007, 12:50 PM
The so-called Islamic Republic of Iran is, was and until the revolution falls apart under its own weight, will remain, a totalitarian and nationalistic state. That’s why I have said calling Iran Islamofascist is the only correct use of that term.
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Strzelecki
02-27-2007, 12:54 PM
Whyyy!?? How could they block us! :(
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Woodrow
02-27-2007, 01:07 PM
So far the block seems to be limited to interactive information exchange sites. I have no trouble in connecting to the newspapers in Tehran. Iranian businesses are still selling products online world wide.
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