One day after Iranians around the world celebrated the unblocking of Facebook, Facebook was blocked again. There are a few theories as to why the event occurred. Some say that it was a glitch. Others claim that it was a test by the government so they can assess the reaction online and monitor Iranian usage of the social networking site.
Iranian government officials have justified the restriction on Facebook access by stating that is dangerous to family values. Facebook poses a threat to marriages and can cause divorces, the IRI has stated. In addition, individuals have commented on the tendency of Iranian women to post pictures of themselves without the hijab, claiming that is a risky and undesirable act.
TEHRAN — Internet users in Iran were surprised on Monday to find that they could access Facebook and Twitter without having to evade the government’s firewall, which had blocked direct access to the Web sites for years.
It was not immediately clear whether the government had made an official decision to stop blocking the sites, which it walled off from Iranian users in 2009, saying they were being used by antigovernment protesters to organize demonstrations. To reach the sites, many Iranians began using virtual private network, or VPN, software to connect through computers located outside the country, though the telecommunications ministry eventually deployed technology to block much of that kind of traffic as well.
The country’s new president, Hassan Rouhani, has promised several times to reduce Internet censorship, and several of his cabinet ministers, including the foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, have set up Facebook pages and opened Twitter accounts, some of them quite active.
Iranian Internet users reacted to the apparent unblocking on Monday as if a digital Berlin Wall had just crumbled on their computer screens.
“Hurray, I came to Facebook without using VPN,” a user called Bita posted on her wall. “Thank you Rouhani!!!,” Nima wrote.
In a twist of timing, an American Web-hosting company recently shut down the Web site of Mehdi Karroubi, an opposition leader who has been under house arrest since February 2011, to comply with United States sanctions that block hosting any site with the domain .ir, for Iran, Reuters reported Monday.
In Iran, Internet censorship is the responsibility of the Supreme Council for Cyberspace, which has made millions of Web pages off limits for Iranians, including the Web site of The New York Times. A special police unit visits Internet users at home, especially in smaller cities, and warns them not to try to visit blocked sites.
It was especially difficult to sidestep the firewall in June, around the time of the Iranian presidential election. In the days before the vote, supporters of the outgoing president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, fought for hours with officials at an Internet filtering center when several sites favoring Mr. Ahmadinejad were blocked.
Several hard-line politicians have made public comments in recent days calling Facebook “a Zionist tool,” but the fact that it was accessible in Iran on Monday suggested that the censorship council, which Mr. Rouhani heads, might have decided otherwise.
Still, the government has sometimes let the firewall blocking Facebook and Twitter slip open briefly by mistake, and some Iranians cautioned that the opening on Monday, too, might be just a glitch.
It's interesting how much people in free countries take for granted their ability to disseminate information without fear of censorship. Obviously there are exceptions to this, but by and large we are pretty lucky to be able to say what we want. Do you know how easily accessible these VPN's are? In China only foreigners and wealthy nationals have access. I wonder how hard they are to use in Iran.
ReplyDeleteI really find issues like this so fascinating, especially because it's so mind boggling for Westerners to comprehend anything to this nature. We can type just about anything into Google and find thousands of search results. Was this just a glitch? Today I was reading an article about 'revenge websites' in which ex-lovers posted nude pictures of their ex-girlfriends along with the girlfriends' full names, Facebook profile link, and sometimes even their work address. Terrifyingly, even though states such as California are working hard to deem these websites illegal, it's virtually impossible for police agencies to sift through them because users can simply create a fake IP address and post whatever they want. It's interesting to see how people in Iran barely have access to Facebook, yet in the United States our police have to work within a bizarre grey area just to ensure that a woman's naked pictures aren't posted along with her actual work address. Strange world we live in.
ReplyDelete