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Iranian Police Tracking Dissidents Using Tech From Western Companies

chrb writes "A recent article at Bloomberg discusses Western companies supplying monitoring equipment to Iran. There are few regulations restricting the sale of intelligence monitoring systems to the Iranian government, and large corporations like Ericsson and Nokia have supplied the equipment used to identify dissidents and suppress anti-government protests. '[One such system from Creativity Software] can record a person’s location every 15 seconds — eight times more frequently than a similar system the company sold in Yemen, according to company documents. A tool called "geofences" triggers an alarm when two targets come in close proximity to each other. The system also stores the data and can generate reports of a person's movements. A former Creativity Software manager said the Iran system was far more sophisticated than any other systems the company had sold in the Middle East.'"

4 of 161 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Anti-Iran sentiment by niftydude · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Your post is a bit incoherent - are you trying to accuse me of being paranoid?

    Here's some reading for you.
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/nov/02/uk-military-iran-attack-nuclear

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/nov/03/iran-nuclear-ambitions-secret-war

    Come back when you have a clearer picture of your country's current political strategy.

    --
    You can never know everything, and part of what you do know will always be wrong. Perhaps even the most important part.
  2. Re:Businesses are not the only ones doing this by dkleinsc · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Ever notice the dearth of American weapons in all of the third world killing zones?

    No, actually - first off, I've never been there, so I have no firsthand knowledge. Second, with the amount of American-backed violence in those Third World 'killing zones', I figure they must have handed the guys we've decided are on our side at least a few American weapons.

    There's also a practical reason for preferring the Russian-made weapons over American-made: The AK-47 is cheaper to make, and easier to maintain, repair, and clean.

    --
    I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
  3. Re:Profit! by Bardwick · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm an idiot because your arguing a different point (which i agree with oddly). My point is that it's not up to the individual business to decided who is nice enough to buy thier technology. If Nokia sold them equipment/technology that was against U.S. policy, then by all means, prosecute. Use your own examples, They are all illegal. What Nokia did was legal. I take issue with some business practices, but I'm also going to call bullshit when I see it. GE paid no taxes so GE=bad. Why? Did they follow all current tax laws? Yes? Did they get write downs for losing thier ass the year before (shh.. it's a secret), yes. Ask yourself, "Can Krogers decide to not sell food to Muslims?". In short, if you want something illegal, make it illegal. BTW, as the IDIOT of the group, can you point out, in any way the part of your post the refutes mine?

  4. Re:Anti-Iran sentiment by benjfowler · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Nobody, except the sickest, craziest Zionists and right-wing Republicans -- is that stupid. Like the Burmese junta, the mad mullahs of Tehran are a hydra-headed beast; cutting off a few heads won't destroy the beast. With this lot, change clearly has to come from within.

    Or should I say, their system needs a few decades to rot from within; their ideological rigidity and zeal will ensure that they won't be able to adapt to circumstances, and they'll eventually be blown away by the winds of change before they even know what hit them.

    So what, if these monkeys get nukes? If they ever dare to use them, they'll be obliterated, and they know it. Even animals have survival instincts. Why not just LET them waste the money and resources building useless weapons. A dollar spent building a centrifuge, is a dollar not spent on far more threatening conventional arms, or terror operations.

    All we have to do is sit back, play the long game, and wait.