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Uncategorized Monday, August 6th 2012 at 3:30 pm

Iran to Remove Key Ministries From the Internet by September

We’ve been hearing about Iran wanting to disconnect from the lawless pit of sins that is the Internet for a while, but it never seemed like it was going to happen. Empty threats, we thought. They wouldn’t want to lose Lolcats, we said. Well, now we have reports saying Iran is planning on moving its key ministries from the Internet come September, and house them in its very own intranet.

We first heard of Iran’s plans to block its citizens from the Internet in May of 2011. The news came from Iran’s telecommunications chief, who claimed that Iran would be replacing the Internet with a state-censored, fully-internal Internet of its own, seeking to achieve 100% adoption among its citizens in two years. Almost a year later, on April 2012, we were getting mixed signals on the matter. Iranian minister for Information and Communications Technology Reza Taghipour had apparently released a statement outlining a plan to phase out the Internet and replace it with a “clean internet”, but later the Iranian Information Ministry issued their own statement, denying everything.

On August 5th, the very same Reza Taghipour was quoted by RT as having said the following:

The establishment of the national intelligence network will create a situation where the precious intelligence of the country won’t be accessible to these powers [...] The Internet should not be in the hands of one or two specific countries.

Iran’s key ministries and governmental facilities will be moved to an internal system as soon as September. This is just the first step in moving toward a true intranet blocking all access to the outside. Given that everything out on the web that isn’t from Iran is “untrustworthy” now, it’ll likely actually move as fast as they project if not faster. These statements come after Iran saw a number of cyberattacks on its nuclear facilities in June. Further reports in July of an Iranian nuclear facility being hacked to play AC/DC’s Thunderstruck at full volume in the middle of the night probably had something to do with it too.

Even with these intrusions, is withdrawing their entire nation into a closed, protected intranet a way to keep hackers out, or to keep citizens in?

(via RT)

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  • Stealthnugget

    I can’t facepalm hard enough at this. Iran… no, just no.

  • http://profiles.google.com/joint.striker joint striker

    Actually I think this is one of the best things a government could do to protect itself from threats. Logically one would assume that the same is true for the most sensitive networks in the US government. Obviously that forcing the entire country to be filtered/censored by the same system is another story altogether.

  • http://www.facebook.com/kent.atwood1 Kent Atwood

    They should build a big ass dome over the country to keep intelligence in (out).

  • Amir Gh1029

    خب من بهتون میگم جریان چیه
    من خودم تو ایران زندگی میکنم
     I live in iran
    It’s going to happen and people like us can’t do anything…but
    i promise you after that we won’t be quite
    .
    .
    nice website

  • FreeBSD

    sounds like a plan.