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Iran: 30 million lose access to foreign email services
By Associated Press, Updated: Saturday, February 11, 2:20 PM
TEHRAN, Iran An Iranian news agency reports that more than 30 million people in the country have lost access to foreign email services such as Gmail, Yahoo mail and Hotmail.
The Saturday report by the semiofficial Mehr agency says that the authorities in the national telecommunications company declined to comment on the outage that began Thursday, saying that it had no connection to them.
Iran has occasionally restricted the Internet since the turmoil that followed the 2009 elections and blocked websites including Facebook, Twitter, Voice of America and the BBC Farsi service.
Iran: 30 million lose access to foreign email services - The Washington Post
In order to allegedly contain potential uprisings, the nation of Iran is cutting off Internet access.
The Iranian government has reportedly begun blocking access to the Internet. A post on Hacker News explains that since yesterday, its been difficult to impossible to get online. Since Thursday Iranian government has shutted [sic] down the HTTPS protocol which has caused almost all Google services (Gmail, and Google.com itself) to become inaccessible, Sara70 writes. Almost all websites that rely on Google APIs (like Wolphram Alpha) wont work.
This month marks the anniversary of the 1979 Islamic Revolution (a celebration which continues through March), and the Iranian government is allegedly attempting to contain potential demonstrations by quieting citizens connection to the rest of the world.
Websites using HTTPS are many: in addition to Google and its various Web products, they include Facebook, Hotmail, and Yahoo. An Iranian citizen who wished to remain anonymous told Cnet this morning that despite the widespread news, the government is denying these actions.
If the Iranian officials plan to cut off citizens during the entire holiday, that means Iran could be in the dark until next month. Iran operates its Internet much like China, meaning it has its own state run firewall. According to various reports, work-arounds typically used to circumvent this are not working.
Iran blocks the Internet
By Associated Press, Updated: Saturday, February 11, 2:20 PM
TEHRAN, Iran An Iranian news agency reports that more than 30 million people in the country have lost access to foreign email services such as Gmail, Yahoo mail and Hotmail.
The Saturday report by the semiofficial Mehr agency says that the authorities in the national telecommunications company declined to comment on the outage that began Thursday, saying that it had no connection to them.
Iran has occasionally restricted the Internet since the turmoil that followed the 2009 elections and blocked websites including Facebook, Twitter, Voice of America and the BBC Farsi service.
Iran: 30 million lose access to foreign email services - The Washington Post
In order to allegedly contain potential uprisings, the nation of Iran is cutting off Internet access.
The Iranian government has reportedly begun blocking access to the Internet. A post on Hacker News explains that since yesterday, its been difficult to impossible to get online. Since Thursday Iranian government has shutted [sic] down the HTTPS protocol which has caused almost all Google services (Gmail, and Google.com itself) to become inaccessible, Sara70 writes. Almost all websites that rely on Google APIs (like Wolphram Alpha) wont work.
This month marks the anniversary of the 1979 Islamic Revolution (a celebration which continues through March), and the Iranian government is allegedly attempting to contain potential demonstrations by quieting citizens connection to the rest of the world.
Websites using HTTPS are many: in addition to Google and its various Web products, they include Facebook, Hotmail, and Yahoo. An Iranian citizen who wished to remain anonymous told Cnet this morning that despite the widespread news, the government is denying these actions.
If the Iranian officials plan to cut off citizens during the entire holiday, that means Iran could be in the dark until next month. Iran operates its Internet much like China, meaning it has its own state run firewall. According to various reports, work-arounds typically used to circumvent this are not working.
Iran blocks the Internet