Iran Continues to Censor Internet Communications 448
eldawg writes "Iran has recently been in the news after electing a 'hardliner' president. But even previous 'liberal' Iranian governments have been putting together a sophisticated Internet filtering system to prevent their citizens from visiting 'questionable' websites and censoring dissent. An earlier posting at Slashdot outlined the crackdown on blogs, chat rooms and email communications. A more recent research paper from the OpenNet Initiative provides an update on the censoring activity in Iran. Reports indicate that the Iranian authorities are specifically targetting 'content in the local Farsi language using a filterning second only to China.'
We know Cisco has played a large role in bulding the 'Great Firewall of China' but is the Iranian initiative homegrown?"
Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:3, Insightful)
By that logic and assuming things continue as they are, in 20 years we would have to invade ourselves.
If things continue as they are, in 20 years the only "alternative" media (i.e., not owned and operated by corporate plutocrats) the USA might have is Pacifica Radio, and that's assuming there IS radio in 20 years or that it wasn't
Come down off that high horse before you get hurt (Score:4, Insightful)
If things continue as they are, in 20 years the only "alternative" media (i.e., not owned and operated by corporate plutocrats) the USA might have is Pacifica Radio, and that's assuming there IS radio in 20 years or that it wasn't bought out by AirAmerica and its corporate sponsors.
Oh come on man. The US has blogs and media of all stripes and flavors coming out the wazoo. There simply is not censorship here even remotely similar to the horrible things that take place elsewhere, and to even hint we are close at it is to demean those that suffer from REAL censorship. Have you been arrested and thrown in prison and then beaten for suggesting you do not like the president? I don't think so. And in twenty years it will most likely be the same, only more so. I'm not likley in twenty years to be bricking up my old copies of Reason behind a wall so the governement can't find them.
I just cannot stand to see people use the argument that America is the next Facist state when they obviously have no idea what the hell that really means or what happens when you are really in one.
Re:Come down off that high horse before you get hu (Score:3, Insightful)
well, instead of beating our chests and calling names, let's actually see how we measure up, shall we? ( definitions from wikipedia.org )
ok..
Re:Come down off that high horse before you get hu (Score:3, Informative)
2. you're wrong.
1. I said If things continue as they are, in 20 years
You answered the statement you WANTED to answer by saying
There simply is not censorship here even remotely similar to the horrible things that take place elsewhere
I was not using the present tense - YOU WERE. I was saying that IF THINGS CONTINUE ALONG THE PATH THEY ARE AT PRESENT, we won't have much, if any alternative press in this country.
YOU decided that I was saying that the USA is like Iran TODAY, an
what makes you say he hates the US government? (Score:3, Insightful)
He wouldn't deplore it if he was outside the country and for what was happening. Basically your "My countr right or right!" is the kind of blinkered, knee-jerk, thoughtless but well ingrained attitute that tell me volumes about what you are.
I'm writing this knowing you'll never read it or understand it if you do.
Re:Come down off that high horse before you get hu (Score:3)
Cheney says that they are bad people [guardian.co.uk]
Seems that due process isn't needed if the government believes that you're a bad person.
It happened in 1948... (Score:5, Informative)
Just saying...
Re:It happened in 1948... (Score:2)
Re:It happened in 1948... (Score:4, Interesting)
Well, it's not that easy - as most things in politics. The point of having China in the UN is two-fold: one so we can stop them from doing things to other peoples; two so that we include them (rightfully) among the other superpowers. If you don't think China is a superpower, then you don't understand why it is so hard to force change on them.
I don't agree with what they are doing to their citizens, and in a perfect world we would put a stop to it - but it isn't as easy as it sounds. Kicking China out of the UN would have the same effect as America leaving the UN: World War III. All bets are off and the world starts looking like Europe before World War II.
But why not go into Darfur? Why not hold Saudi Arabia to the same standards? Saudi Arabia is a member of the United Nations and executes innocent people by the hundreds weekly. Why not stop all forms of tyranny everywhere? Because it isn't practical. When we (liberals) were trying to do it we were told to stop trying to save the world - now saving the world is lead policy to NeoConservatives (by their own admissions, see: BBC's The Power of Nightmares: The Rise of the Politics of Fear).
Why not start to right the wrongs at home?
http://www.globalissues.org/HumanRights/Abuses/US
Even China thinks we have problems:
http://english.people.com.cn/200503/03/eng2005030
Of course, I'm a "crazy liberal" when I start to talk about making America better. Let's start with things we *can* change...
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:4, Insightful)
Only if there's enough oil there to make it worthwhile.
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course it's not entirely so simple as "higher oil prices always lead to higher oil company profits," since at a certain point people will presumably curtail their consumption enough to offset the
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:5, Insightful)
Whatever. I know some uptight ID-10T failure will mod this "flaimbait", but when was the last time our "free press" reported anything more than canned statments and irrelevant gossip? Moreover, when was the last time you actually looked forward to seeing the 9 PM news to learn about actual pressing North American and World news?
Consider: Lacy Peterson, Lost boyscouts, Wacko-Jacko, family drama with that paralyzed person (as if this is the only person suffering), Iraq war "coverage", celebrity gossip, etc...
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:3, Interesting)
That is what scares me about the republican party... there's enough extremists packed in it that they're tearing up the line between religion and government, in which the founding fathers specifically put there to prevent the Christian Republic of America from forming.
Don't get me wrong, there are tons of liberal wacko's too, but they're more about giving you more free
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:5, Informative)
There are a lot more socialist and communist we-want-to-run-your-life liberal wacko's out there than there are many of the peace-love-and-rock-n-roll just leave everyone alone crowd anymore.
Especially the farther you get into politics, since politics tends to attract the control types, while the non-control types don't seem to desire the power as much.
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:3, Informative)
One, they ruled that the Federal government has jurisdiction over anything that *affects* interstate commerce. This is practically any activity on the planet, given how indirect they allow the chain to be.
Two, they ruled that "public use" for the purposes of forcibly seizing prope
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:5, Informative)
Can anyone tell me how liberal [reference.com] became a derogatory term in the U.S. ?
I find this very strange every time I see it here.
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:3)
There's another one. Moderate socialism can be a good thing. Universal health care would be a great start.
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:3, Insightful)
You say that like its a bad thing ...
maybe its because the vast majority of men worldwide are neanderthal chest-thumping patriarchal assholes who are too proud/stubborn/stupid/control freak to admit they've made a mistake, but in some countries women have won the right to tell them to shove it.
Divorce is an admission of having made a mistake. Prohibiting divorce won't suddenly fix the mistake - it just lets it
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:3, Insightful)
How many people leave America to go to a theocracy? John Walker Lindh and a few other nutcases.
Free societies are *better* than less free ones, not just different - if you don't believe that then you don't believe in anything.
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:2)
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:2)
They'll do it if the evangelicals think it's a good idea. Sooner or later, people will realize that Bush & Co are only superficial Christians. I hope. I'm not a Christian, but I think Jesus had a great message, and these guys don't have anything to do with it.
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:5, Insightful)
Exactly the opposite is true. Leftists always proceed from a POV that they are more intelligent, enlightened, caring, warm, etc., than others and thus their ideas can, should, and must be followed or else you are a know-nothing imbecile who needs to be controlled for the good of society and yourself. They are the only ones who know what is going on and everyone else is stupid.
They even feel free to engage in massive sneering religious intolerance, smearing Christians, treating religious Jews with condescention, and knocking aside peaceful Muslims in order to hold up radicals and terrorists as "authentic". They quite often proceed right past arrogance to "holy effrontery" without noticing how absurd they look.
It wasn't conservatives who invented political correctness. At worst conservatives are given to annoying passive "everyone can survive or fail on their own with no help whatsoever" neglect. I say worst because the fiery ones are obviously laughable and despite portrayal by liberals to the contrary, have no real influence. Liberals more often embrace an arrogant refusal to accept anyone not bowing before their views and worshipping the ground they walk on and fight like mad to get their way no matter what the cost to others, as long as they win and their ideas are enshrined.
Seems like the kind of mindset I see among Linux zealots who sputter and foam in befuddlement that the masses didn't listen to them five or more years ago and adopt Linux and put Microsoft out of business. Just to give it understanding for the
BTW, since when is it not hypocrisy to decry bigotry on one side, yet practice it freely on the other? Anti-Christian rhetoric on this board is fairly free flowing and thick and utterly without redeeming value. It has no proper place here. But like the rest of the incessant "we're smarter than you" leftist weenie nonsense, it seems to be part and parcel of the stereotype. It needs to stop, really. Or we can have these political discussions ad nauseum.
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, Democrats in congress piss me off too. Just like Republicans. It's been a long time since we've had any real liberalism/progressiveism in congres
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:4, Insightful)
Err, more correctly, Evangelical Protestant Christian Republic of America.
Christians were (and remain) Christians long before anyone anyone had heard of Martin Luther, or before anyone thought of translating anything into English and binding it in soft-cover to thump and reinterpret.
That's even before the schism that brought about the Catholics (the folks with the pointy hats) establishing themselves in Rome under a pope (the guy with the really big pointy hat), leaving the Orthodox (the incense burning bearded dudes dressed in black robes) to themselves in the East.
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:2)
Who the KKK? Wasn't it fairly recently that they even let Catholics in?
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:5, Insightful)
In fact, I'm not sure why American Lutherans call themselves Lutherans anyway. They certainly have nothing to do with the European (particularly German) Lutheran, plus they seem tor reject most of Luther's teachings... Feh.
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:2)
It's like the centrists -- there are plenty of them, but, as Jon Stewart asked, what are they going to go out into the streets and chant? "BE REASONABLE!!"???
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:2)
Re:Ain't nuthin' propa about your propaganda! (Score:3, Interesting)
The church that Luther rebelled against was even nuttier, more intolerant, and more violent than Luther himself.
There are moderate and moral branches of Christianity, but Catholicism, traditional Lutheranism, Calvinism, and modern "evangelical Christians" are not among them.
Is'nt americas working against Democracy (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Is'nt americas working against Democracy (Score:2)
Re:Is'nt americas working against Democracy (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Is'nt americas working against Democracy (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Is'nt americas working against Democracy (Score:3, Informative)
No: it's Iranians working against Democracy (Score:3, Insightful)
Ask yourself this: if the Iranians didn't want the censorship, would American companies be helping them do it, if they even are? No, of course not.
And probably if there are people at Cisco doing any dirty work, they are Iranian, or mid-eastern, anyway. Don't jump to the conclusion that just because the company is American everyon
Re:No: it's Iranians working against Democracy (Score:2)
So if they were involved, they were just "following orders"?
I don't think that's an acceptable defense.
Re:No: it's Iranians working against Democracy (Score:5, Insightful)
There is no difference between setting the policy and implementing it. "Someone else would have done it anyway" is not an excuse. Selling them hardware, much less helping them implement it (like they did in China) makes them equally culpable. Shit like that should not be legal.
Re:No: it's Iranians working against Democracy (Score:4, Insightful)
In the '80s, the US was providing technology and supplies to Saddam's chemical weapons factories. Now, the US is cleaning up the mess, with body parts of it's own young. What goes around, comes around.
To quote the Regans: "Just Say NO!"
Re:Is'nt americas working against Democracy (Score:2)
That is, it seems it is officials elected by the people of Iran choosing to censor their own people. If international companies are involved, then it's international companies providing goods and services requested by the elected officials of Iran. And, thus, at least in principle, services desired by the people of Iran.
So, I guess the lesson is that while democrary, freedom of speech, and
Re:Is'nt americas working against Democracy (Score:2)
Well, we issued these people their corporate charters - not the Iranians. I'm not just saying "fuck them" - but we've made Cisco, Microsoft, et. al. the monsters they are. We are the ones who told them their profits are more important than anything else. If it is such a big deal, we'd stop them. Of course, we have no reason to see the Iranians "free" - we don't want more competition.
Filed under... (Score:3, Funny)
oh no! (Score:3, Funny)
Tyranny extends to all forms of communication!
Am I to act suprised?
Insensitive clods! (Score:3, Interesting)
Opressive regimes (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Opressive regimes (Score:2, Insightful)
Understand the difference?
Re:Opressive regimes (Score:2)
Re:Opressive regimes (Score:2)
Very neatly put.
Re:Opressive regimes (Score:5, Interesting)
The premise is that rational debate on religion is stifled under the guise of tolerance. If I say that Christians are backwards because they believe someone walked on water, I'll be labeled intolerant. If I say Islam is a violent religion that opresses women, and rational thought, I'll be labeled intolerant.
If someone says the world is flat, and I say they are wrong, I'm not labeled intolerant.
What's the difference?
Interesting points (Score:3, Interesting)
I am all for tolerance regarding religion. However, I think people need to stop and think about what this means. Does it mean that rational discussion must be curtailed? I don't think it does. Or rather tolerance, while a noble goal, is also something which can
It means that the government's scared (Score:5, Insightful)
I would say that this is just a sign that the government's scared of their own people and the potential for an uprising. (Which makes sense given that they were revolutionaries themselves.)
Another thing to keep in mind (Score:5, Informative)
/. iran (Score:3, Funny)
Iran vs. the US (Score:5, Interesting)
Alright, I haven't RTFA yet, but if this is news that Iran is censoring the Net then I dont think it's anything new. There have been a number of recent events that are using the media to direct public attention against Iran now (the most recent of which is probably Rumsfeld's Slam of their elections [cnn.com]). As a concerned American citizen who is fast losing faith in the honor of his government, I think this is a ploy, to direct the attention of world citizens, and especially US citizens away from our own flaws and toward the flaws of other countries.
Anybody who read the article a few days ago about the new use of eminent domain [slashdot.org] can see that the US government has major problems with the way it functions. Instead of anybody pointing out the US censors information also, we all hurry to jump on the band wagon to single out and bash Iran. No, they (the US government) don't prevent you from searching for certain words or anything, at least not yet, but they do force the removal of websites that portray a view contrary to what they want the public to know: see http://www.67cshdocs.com/ [67cshdocs.com], a blog that didn't disclose any classified information, but showed you what was really going on on the US war fronts, but was shut down by the government. I'm an American citizen and very patriotic, but I'm not blind. Our government is using the media. No, I'm not saying they are controlling /. or any other news source, I'm saying the media has become the lap dogs who go when the government says fetch.
I don't approve of Iranian censorship. I don't approve of censorship of any sort. But it would be foolish of anyone to believe that the "axis of evil" are the only ones who do this. They simply do not have the size and power to cover up for the mselves and direct public attention elsewhere.
Just my two cents....
Re:Iran vs. the US (Score:2)
Re:Iran vs. the US (Score:2, Informative)
If you are in the Army, they pretty much can tell you what to do (or what not to say).
Unlike the general population that can say anything it wants.
Besides, the truth about the Iraq war and the lies it was/is based upon is clearly evident to anyone who is not a Dubya fanboy.
Parent example of anti-US relativism (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure, the U.S. government (or, more precisely, a small number of members of the U.S. government) are, time and again, doing something stupid that isn't what you'd expect of a free country, and the examples go back to the founding of the country (counting slaves as 2/3 of a person, etc). Things like Jim Crowe, Viet Nam, Watergate, Iran/Contra, etc etc.
But almost without exception these events are noted in the press, analyzed, criticized, written about by thousands in letters to the editor, protested in the street and very often -- tada -- CHANGED. Civil rights act, voting rights act, Nixon's impeachment, Iran/Contra hearings. And no secret police organization decended on private citizens and beat them, impisoned or tortured them for having an opinion contrary to the government or its policies.
Are we perfect? No way. Are we more free than just about any other place? Absolutely. Will we continue to make missteps from time to time? Sure. Human nature isn't always pretty.
You can be a pessimist and argue that evidence points to a declining level of freedom and government accountability. Maybe. But that hardly means that we're even comperable to North Korea, Iran, Syria, or any of a number of other totalitarian/dicatorial/theocratic societies.
Re: Anti-US Relativisim (Score:5, Interesting)
As for press coverage of scandals within the United States, there are two inherent flaws in this belief: first of all, if the mainstream media does not focus on it, then how would the general public know that it happened at all? They wouldn't! This sounds all conspiracy-theory and theoretical on the surface, but my favorite example is the Chinagate scandal. Ask your average citizen walking out the door of your local supermarket about it and I can guarantee that 49 out of 50 or more will respond with a blank look. I know because I've tried it for a history class.
For those not in the loop with this, the Chinagate scandal was the event that was manipulated by the government and the press to become the stupid and superficial Monica Lewinsky scandal. It occurred in the mid-90's and it boils down to Bill Clinton providing China with classified US nuclear technologies and bringing them up to a full scale threat. Regardless of his reasons for doing so, the press got ahold of this in the mid 90's and began printing stories.
The 'letters to the editor' that you speak of were beginning to come off the home desks of the American public. But there was a problem: neither of the two major parties in the US wanted the public to know about this!! The democrats of course because Clinton was in office and the blame would fall partly on his shoulders. The Republicans because Bush Sr. had been doing the same thing!! Of course it would be disasterous to both parties if the public knew they were both involved with it, so both parties wanted it hushed. The result: the Monica Lewinsky scandal grabs American attention instead. The press did not have to be forcefully silenced or censored: they chose to write about those stories on their own, but they were manipulated into that position by politicians. This how the government runs its censorship.
The Chinagate scandal blew over. You can still find it from third-party sources all over the web, but it never really got the public!! If the government can censor something like that, then what is to stop them from using the same means to censor other events? None.
And I am being the pessimist here and pointing at our declining freedoms. You say that we're not even comparable to the Axis of Evil, etc, and I would like this to remain true. The only way for it to continue, however, is for people like me to point out our own flaws. If the American public remains in the dark and directing their attention toward other countries, then by the time people like yourself believe that we ARE comparable, it will be far too late!
As for the "secret police" argument, I say to you that if a single American citizen is held by his own government against his will, without evidence and because he has stated views contrary to those of the US government, then it is just as bad as the many who are suppressed in other countries. One is one too many. But guess what? It happens! That one actually gets to the news fairly regularly! But does the public care? No, because the media soon directs their attention to the evil OTHER COUNTRIES.
It is you, my friend, who are foolish and naïve to argue that there is not a parallel between the US and these other countries. The US may not be "just as bad", but without vigilant citizens, it will be.
Re:Parent example of anti-US relativism (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Iran vs. the US (Score:2)
And who's behind this ploy to poison the world's opinion of Iran to deflect the world's attention away from the US? Who's behind the OpenNet initiaive? Must be the US government, right? Oh wait, no, it's the University of Toronto, Harvard University, and Cambr
Exactly right (Score:2)
As you said the stupid Eminent Domain decision has been roundly criticized from Left, Right, and Center. You simply cannot use THAT example to show how any one area of government is going wrong when most people find it stupid.
of course, what do you expect from a religious... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:of course, what do you expect from a religious. (Score:2)
That's what an Islamic state like Iran (and many others) are. That's what Iraq would like to be. But on the other side of the coin, many people think that's the sort of thing GWB has in mind for us here in the USA, a Christian state. He would probably like it for Iraq as well. Remember, just like with Islamic fundies, it is the mission in life of all Christian fundies to either convert or eliminate.
I don't see the problem (Score:3, Insightful)
Who ever said that every country on the planet must have USA values?
Maybe the people of Iran don't want to watch the stuff we do. Does 1 person who wants to see that content have the right to tell 1,000,000 other people to put up with his crap?
Even in the USA we have community standards. There are some small pockets inside the USA where it is illegal for adult companies to send DVD's. There are places in the USA where the communities want old fashioned values, they want to be able to keep the front door unlocked at night.
democratic countries (Score:2)
it is true what you say if the other country in question had a government whose policies reflected that of the governed
that is not the case in iran or china
therefore, criticism of iran and china is perfectly valid, unless you don't believe the citizens of china or iran deserve a say in how they are governed
the notion of universal human rights is more and more important in today's world, not less
it matters
Why the USA is hated in so many places (Score:2)
it is true what you say if the other country in question had a government whose policies reflected that of the governed
that is not the case in iran or china
therefore, criticism of iran and china is perfectly valid, unless you don't believe the citizens of china or iran deserve a say in how they are governed
The USA paid millions and millions of dollars to put the SHAH in power. We supported him, we gave him money, we gave him miliraty power. And what happened?
universal human rights (Score:2)
if i go south of the rio grande, does it become legal?
in 1994 hundreds of thousands were exterminated in genocide between hutus and tutsis in rwanda
did you care?
i hope you did, and if you did, you did because you were a human being
being a human being is being a member of something that is more important than being a member of a nationality
a nationality is a tribe, a false arbitrary geopolitical boundary
you mention female genital cutting: that is evil, and should be fought
not from an
Re:universal human rights (Score:3, Insightful)
Once again, I ask, what is a world perspective? Who decides? You? Your group of people? Or my group of people? How about the people that live together?
There is no world perspective. There never will be. You will have a hard time getting people who live in the same area, with the same religion, to agree to a complete set of values. Now try and toss in a value that is incompatibe with their beliefs.
I'll give you
Which is better? (Score:2)
Re:Which is better? (Score:2)
Think of values as ethnic food. Places that serve food that you find pungent and offensive to the senses, with strong nasty smells. Now imagine a place where people can't get enough of this food. They love it, they smile
You don't see because you are blind (Score:3, Insightful)
How is having access to information forcing others to put up with your "crap" Unless someone is forcing you to view information or material against your will, why should you care what they are doing?
Or are you one of those people that finds the very existance of opinions that differ from yours offensive?
No different than the US (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:No different than the US (Score:5, Insightful)
In the USA free speech is only possible with money. Look at elections, the candidates with the most money wins most of the time. And whenever there is a law which tries to limit how much money special interest groups can give to candidates, the courts say that money is speech, and they throw those laws out.
How much does a US Senate seat cost? 7 Million dollars? A US Congressional seat is over 1 Million dollars. Who can get this kind of cash? How? If I raise $200,000 in a fund raiser for a candidate, and that candidate wins, how much of an ear do I get? How much influance? What if I am not even from his state, will he take my call over a local constituent? I bet if I call him and say "Law Z is being voted on tomorrow, and I would really like to see you vote for it". If he does not get my $200,000 the next time, he might not win. What does he do?
There is no free speech in the USA. In the USA there is SPAM from advertising, it drowns out everything else. 10 minutes of sit coms or reality TV followed by 4 minutes of commercials. If I was more cynical, I would wonder if they were trying to train my brain to accept information in small tiny sized nuggets.
Re:No different than the US (Score:2, Informative)
Re:No different than the US (Score:3, Informative)
This happened in the primaries in South Carolina. John McCain unexpectedly beat Bush in the previous primary. McCain, a republican, was getting lots of votes from independents and democrats. McCain was also a vet from the Vietnam war and highly respected because as a prisioner of war, his father who
Re:No different than the US (Score:4, Interesting)
And you are not presently reading this message either. Slashdot is a figment of your imagination.
10 minutes of sit coms or reality TV followed by 4 minutes of commercials. If I was more cynical, I would wonder if they were trying to train my brain to accept information in small tiny sized nuggets.
Maybe Steve Jobs has the answer:
When you're young, you look at television and think: There's a conspiracy. The networks have conspired to dumb us down. But when you get a little older, you realize that's not true. The networks are in business to give people exactly what they want. That's a far more depressing thought. Conspiracy is optimistic! You can shoot the bastards! We can have a revolution! But the networks are really in business to give people what they want. It's the truth.
In short: most people are dumb and demand to stay that way.
Actually (Score:2, Interesting)
for such large scale filtering.
To be honest, the company has stated that they do not have an clients
representing the Iranian government.
This leads one to conclude that the software is either being used illegally
or a 3rd party is interfacing between the company and the country.
regardless, filtering of the internet for Iranians will be here for sometime
yet, though through experience i have seen that those that want to circumvent
the syst
Re:Actually (Score:2, Interesting)
Well if they think.... (Score:2)
In America... (Score:2)
Comes from experience you know...
Maybe Iranians have Different Values? (Score:3, Interesting)
Sort of like the Saudis: they want the cars, lobster and Switss watches. They don't want the porn, feminism or modern art.
A lot of the Iranians in the country are probably happy that the arrival of internet doesn't mean they'll be flooded with things they consider degenerate.
Besides, they are smart folks. They'll find a way around it, if they really want the tubgirl, goatsex, etc.
different in degree, not kind (Score:3, Insightful)
The US tracks and prosecutes the copying of music and videos, distribution of pornography showing individuals that appear to be younger than 18 years, and information related to bomb making and terrorism. The latter can land you in indefinite detention without the benefit of a trial, other offenses may result in long jail sentences, prison labor, and may effectively constitute a death sentence given the realities of the US prison system. Germany and France crack down on the distribution of Nazi-related content, even if it not intended to promote Nazi ideology, but they are more liberal on sex and copying. And France seeks out certain kinds of linguistically undesirable content. I suspect most people in each of those nations support most of those policies. Likewise, we don't actually know what the Chinese and Iranian people want; it is wrong to assume that, even if they could decide democratically, they would want to draw the line where we want to draw it.
Before we criticize nations like Iran and China, it's good to reflect on what we actually want them to do and what the people in those nations want. We apparently don't want them to have a free and unrestricted Internet, since we don't have that ourselves. Nor can we expect other societies to tolerate some of the content that we have learned to live with (goatse etc.). So, what do you actually want Iran and China to do? Only filtering and enforcement for the benefit of Disney? Or what?
Re:The Time to Bomb Iran has Come (Score:2)
Re:1 Word (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:no shit! (Score:2)
Nope, the government is not censoring anything. Government is what the people choose. The USA put in a puppet government, the SHAH, who we supported with USA money. What happened? The PEOPLE of Iran overthrew him because they did not want a western style of government.
It is not that hard to overthrow a government. People have done it throught history, many, many times.
Iran has every right to be a religious state, to pass laws sayin
Re:no shit! (Score:2)
But why can't 120 agnostics, or otherwise get a say? I'm not knocking Christmas, but don't force people to act out a scene from the bible which they don't believe in, that's not fair either.
Re:no shit! (Score:2)
Re:no shit! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Iran didn't "elect" anyone (Score:2)
Re:Iran didn't "elect" anyone (Score:3, Insightful)
Don't get me wrong I know there is no democracy in Iran, mostly because the president (whoever he is) does not have real power -- real power is still held by religous institutions an
Re:Iran didn't "elect" anyone (Score:2)
This could never happen in properly run capitalist democracies.
Despite the religious establishment's attempts to manipulate the elections, he has emerged with a strong mandate for economic reform (maybe not your idea of reform), 60% of a 60% voter turnout.
It will be interesting to see if he is able to use this mandate to push through his economic reform platform, whic
Re:you're fscking imperialists (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:you're fscking imperialists (Score:2)
Re:This is a bit offtopic, yes, however (Score:2)
Re:And I should care because? (Score:2, Insightful)
1- We cannot judge a whole nation based on the ideologies and policies of their leaders, especially when those leaders are not in power based on the choice of people.
2- Many times US money and policies were the main reason behind those leaders coming to power or (keeping) their power.
3- The ideologies of the people are in many ways greatly influenced by their controlled media, and free information means that these people can see the bigger picture and make well informed decisions