Baltimore Sun Sunday

Sea of censors can’t stop Iranians from surfing web

- By Mehdi Fattahi

TEHRAN, Iran — Before Nazilla Akbari can check out the latest offerings on Twitter or YouTube, she scrolls through her smartphone, searching for the right workaround to bypass state censors.

It’s a game that has become second nature in Iran, where the clerically-led government restricts access to popular social media sites and where U.S. sanctions create other barriers.

“Every day I struggle for 40 minutes just to get connected to uncensored internet,” said Akbari, 30, a software developer. “Even after I do, the internet is so slow that I have difficulty even watching a short video.”

Iranian authoritie­s have sought to limit Western cultural influence since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. They began blocking popular sites like Twitter, Facebook and YouTube when activists used them to organize mass protests and document a crackdown after a disputed election in 2009.

That hasn’t stopped Iranians from accessing such sites through virtual private networks, or VPNs, and other services. It also hasn’t prevented a number of top Iranian officials from using the sites to broadcast the official line.

Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif frequently tweets in English, and accounts believed to be run by the offices of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and President Hassan Rouhani regularly post on their behalf.

Khamenei has urged the nation’s youth to “smartly use the cyberspace to slap the enemy in the mouth,” and pro-government accounts have proliferat­ed on Twitter and Instagram.

Rouhani, a relative moderate in Iran’s clerical establishm­ent, vowed to expand internet freedom when he was elected in 2013 but has failed to fully deliver on those promises, in part because the judiciary and security forces are dominated by hard-liners.

In 2018, authoritie­s blocked Telegram, an app that had been used by tens of millions of Iranians to send encrypted messages, after it was used to organize protests over economic hardships.

Hard-liners fear that full access to the internet would allow Western countries to penetrate the Islamic Republic and foment unrest against the ruling clerics.

Authoritie­s have developed their own closed system, known as the “national informatio­n network,” that blocks many foreign sites and slows access to others. Some refer to it as the “halal net,” applying the term used for that which is permitted under Islam.

Officials say it is designed to protect the country from cyberattac­ks and U.S. sanctions. Iran is also developing its own services for messaging, online banking and entertainm­ent, part of a larger push for self-sufficienc­y amid Western sanctions.

The government has taken steps to expand access and widen bandwidths, with Rouhani claiming this month that all towns and 78% of villages have access to high-speed internet. But many Iranians say surfing the web is disappoint­ing.

“The number of users has grown at a much faster rate than the speed of the country’s internet,” said Danial Behzadi, an informatio­n technology expert. “In general, the internet in Iran is relatively slow, expensive and has poor neutrality.”

The sanctions have also created barriers, with the U.S. government barring many tech firms from providing services in Iran. The Trump administra­tion has ramped up sanctions, including on the country’s vital oil industry, since withdrawin­g the U.S. from Iran’s nuclear deal with world powers last year.

Users trying to download apps frequently encounter messages saying such services are prohibited, and some American companies suspend accounts when they realize the users are in Iran.

The sanctions also restrict the ability of Iranians to shop online.

Iranians are also unable to use major credit cards or online services like PayPal because the country is cut off from the internatio­nal banking system. Amazon refuses to ship to Iran because of the sanctions.

 ?? VAHID SALEMI/AP ?? Iranians have become adept at bypassing clerically-led government censors when trying to access the internet.
VAHID SALEMI/AP Iranians have become adept at bypassing clerically-led government censors when trying to access the internet.

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