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Iran Blocks, Unblocks Access to Google

morpheus83 writes "Iran has blocked access to the Google search engine and its Gmail email service as part of a clampdown on material deemed to be offensive. Hamid Shahriari, the secretary of Iran's National Council of Information did not explain why the sites were being blocked. Google, Gmail and several other foreign sites appeared to be inaccessible to Iranian users from Monday morning. Iran has tough censorship on cultural products and internet access, banning thousands of websites and blogs containing sexual and politically critical material as well as women's rights and social networking sites." That didn't take long. Iran has now unblocked Google claiming the censorship was an error.

10 of 197 comments (clear)

  1. Censorship is the last resort of a failing regime by The_Fire_Horse · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As has happened many times before, What starts as a simple censorship of a website ALWAYS turns into more nastier things while the 'people in charge' are trying to control the masses.

    How stupid are these governments - really. Do they honestly believe that the problems of their country can be solved by stopping someone having a GMail account, or preventing them looking up camel porn on google?

    Iran is in a desperate attempt to return to old school biblical times (great if you are not a woman - "Iran has tough censorship on internet access .... as well as womens rights") and are now clutching at straws - it can only result in resentment from the citizens.

  2. Information needs to be free by downix · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The loss of information is a step in the direction of cultural collapse. If you constantly treat your citizens as children, you either a) stop being productive or b) get a bunch of very angry citizens.

    Iran, you might have a culture that demands things, but if you force them onto your population, you will create resentment, resentment becomes anger, and anger begets revolution. Remember the Shah? The current government is running along the same path, and will meet with the same end.

    --
    Karma Whoring for Fun and Profit.
  3. Re:You can't "slap a Jap" anymore by MyLongNickName · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Wow. I have seen a couple instances where you take fact A add it to fact B and come up with false conclusion C. This is another one.

    Fact A: The US has a history of stereotyping other cultures
    Fact B: The US executive administration wants to go to war with Iran.
    False Conclusion C: We are not allowed to paint Iran as bigoted, sexist or totalitarian.

    The fact that the US has problems does not correlate to Iran being pure as the wind-driven snow. In fact with all of our problems, I'd much rather live here we have the opportunity to fix our problems.

    --
    See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
  4. Re:You can't "slap a Jap" anymore by faloi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In the obvious run up to the war with Iran, it seems like the media is all too happy to paint them with the bigot, sexist, and totalitarian brushes. We are doing this with China. We did this with Iraq. Now, with Iran in our sights, they also get the black tar treatment.

    Oddly enough, I find it hard to be sympathetic toward a country that hosts a Holocaust Denial seminar. Maybe I really am part of the problem.

    --
    "It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education." -Albert Einstein
  5. Re:Unblocked by UnHolier+than+ever · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No, there are twelve. However, I would expect all of them to use the same blacklist provided by the government.

  6. unless iran deserves to be tarred by circletimessquare · · Score: 3, Insightful

    it's really this simple: make a list of your complaints about governments in the west

    now judge the government of iran on the basis of those criticisms

    in other words, on the basis of the principles on which you vocally criticize the west, you should be loudly criticizing tehran

    "And if you buy into any of this at all, you're the problem with this country."

    ok, there's a criticism of yours: the drumbeat up to war, the propagandizing of a populace towards conflict

    dude!

    ever since 1979, the government of iran has been on propaganda full alert about demonizing the decadent immoral great satan of the west. constant rhetoric, demonstrations, down with the great satan. all through the 1980s, 1990s, 2000s

    so on YOUR BASIS for criticizing the west: dmeonization of another people for a drumbeat up to war, on YOUR BASIS!: tehran comes out orders of magnitude worse than any criticism you could level at london, paris, washington dc, etc

    using YOUR RATIONALE, you should be 10-100x angrier at tehran than any government in the west

    so go to the front of the line sir, and hurl some of your venom at tehran, unless you want to forfeit your claim to intellectual honesty

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  7. Re:Censorship is the last resort of a failing regi by dbolger · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That logic can be applied both ways. Imagine right now, on Tehrandot.org:

    "I heard on Al Jazeera last week, from an American protesting in Washington, that there are a large contingent of the population is is pro-peace, and who are looking for better relations with the rest of the world. But if that's the case, why has there been no real groundswell to remove the current government?"

    I'm looking at this from an outsiders perspective, but it seems to me that in both countries (United States and Iran), there are a reasonable, sane majority of people just trying to get on with their lives, who are being pushed into war by a vocal, fundamentalist minority.

    Rational people on both side look out, and see only the extremists. Joe Washington doesn't want war but everything he hears regarding Iran is negative - they want to wipe out Israel, they want to build nukes. Joe Tehran has a generally pacifist outlook too, but when he reads about America, it is usually because of attrocities like Abu Ghraib, or some other massacre. Time passes, and the crazies on both sides get louder and louder, while the rational people - constantly exposed to this propaganda, start to feel that even though they want peace, the "other side" is giving them no choice but to go to war.

  8. Re:You can't "slap a Jap" anymore by TommyMc · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Yes, but by not adhering to your "False Conclusion C", you're alienating the people in Iran who are reasonable and, being a part of their total population, who are in the best position to effect change.

    I was in America visiting family when the mass-media collectively decided they 'hated' the French, and between the outright bigotry of the right wing Radio, and the 'jokes' of the Television comedians very very few people actually addressed what the French government had said..

    It's like a positive feedback cycle whereby a couple of people start to get a few cheap laughs and suddenly it's 'ok' to do so, so every one does else joins in, because we all know it's easier to point and laugh at someone who's been stereotyped as different than it is to actually be creative. The same thing has happened with Steven Hawking in the UK where a few jokes were well received because people laughed whilst asking disbelievingly "Can they say that?", whereas now they're so ubiquitous its just become a game of laugh at the disabled guy.

    Anyway, I digress. My point is that if people really want to change things then they should be formulating arguments against why "bigotry, sexism and totalitarianism" are bad things, because although it seems obvious to us it's useless unless you can put it in a social or historical context. Some will claim that there's a 'politically-correct' conspiracy to stop people from having fun, but I don't buy it. Surely, when the majority of sheep in a given culture turn irrationally against a population (read:not a political viewpoint but a diverse group of people) it is the job of the intelligent people (which, I'm sure if you asked 1000 /.ers, at least 999 of them would think they were) to stand as the voice of reason. I wouldn't expect any less of intelligent Iranians in this position as I would of intelligent Americans

    Or maybe I'm just naive..

    --
    Stupid people think it's cool. Smart people thinks it's a joke; also cool.
  9. Re:You can't "slap a Jap" anymore by vertinox · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Oddly enough, I find it hard to be sympathetic toward a country that hosts a Holocaust Denial [go.com] seminar. Maybe I really am part of the problem.

    Actually, due to the fact that the US is partly responsible for the current Iranian government (Operation Ajax blowout with the Shah) I would have to say us Americans are part of the problem. We replaced a socialism sympathizer with a dictator who brutally ruled his people and then we get all uppity when he gets replaced by a theocratic revolution. Then we back Saddam in hopes that he'll take care of the problem and it all goes to hell.

    Things would have been find and we wouldn't be talking about Iran's nuclear program today had we not interfered with a legal election.

    Speaking of which, in theory, 9/11 would have never happened because we wouldn't have been arming Saddam against the theocratic Iran which later lead to the invasion of Kuwait which lead to Osama getting all pissy about American bases in Saudi Arabia.

    This is what we call "blowback". We've been over there for 50 years interfering, overthrowing people, supporting dictators, and selling weapons to everyone and you wonder why they hate us.

    I don't approve of Holocaust denying and hope that Israel will be recognized as a sovereign nation by all, but to say we didn't make this bed in Iran and share some responsibility of it is just not learning history correctly.

    --
    "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
    -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
  10. Re:Armed Citizens In the Modern World by Deadplant · · Score: 3, Insightful

    hey should grow some balls and try standing up for themselves. Yeah, that works. So, we'll see some guy with his grocery bags standing in front of a Russian or Chinese
    supplied tank, stopping the entire Iranian Army from running down protesters that "grew some balls". I get the feeling neither of you know much about recent Iranian history.

    The Iranians are quite capable of overthrowing a government. They did so relatively recently (1979ish) when they overthrew the CIA-coup-installed US-backed douche Mohammad Reza Pahlavi (aka the "Shah").
    Sadly the revolutionary forces had too many religious wackos and too few young liberal students and the poor bastards got stuck with a theocracy/democracy/republic. Kinda like the USA but with a different(worse; ya, i said it**) religion.

    There is of course very little chance of another revolution soon because no sane person would overthrow their own government while it is under imminent threat of invasion/pre-emptive nuclear attack.
    In fact, there is nothing quite like an irrational, powerful and belligerent enemy to strengthen the position of a bad government.

    ** just to be clear, all religions suck-ass and have no business anywhere near a government.