Iran’s longest internet blackout reveals an info-war over truth and reach

TL;DR Summary
After protests in January, Iran shut down the internet—the longest blackout in the country’s history—in an effort to stop mobilization, a move that slowed information flow but did not quell the uprising. Connectivity has returned in fits and starts, with Starlink terminals providing a rare window into events, while experts note the regime’s use of censorship, coercion, and AI-driven disinformation. The piece also discusses how activists rely on VPNs and satellite access to document abuses and how satellite-to-cell tech could reimagine connectivity beyond state-controlled networks.
- Shedding light on Iran’s longest internet blackout The Verge
- Who controls the internet — and has the power to turn it off? The Times
- The future of Iran’s internet connectivity is still bleak, even as weeks-long blackout begins to lift CNN
- Iran’s Nationwide Internet Blackout Has Left Us Feeling Hopeless and Helpless Truthout
- How Iran shut down the internet and built a sophisticated system of digital control The Conversation
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