It was not immediately clear whether the government had made an
official decision to stop blocking the sites, which it walled off from
Iranian users in 2009, saying they were being used by antigovernment
protesters to organize demonstrations. To reach the sites, many Iranians
began using virtual private network, or VPN,vacuum bottle software
to connect through computers located outside the country, though the
telecommunications ministry eventually deployed technology to block much
of that kind of traffic as well.The country’s new president, Hassan
Rouhani, has promised several times to reduce Internet censorship, and
several of his cabinet ministers, including the foreign minister,
Mohammad Javad Zarif, have set up Facebook pages and opened Twitter
accounts, some of them quite active.Clawfoot tubsIranian
Internet users reacted to the apparent unblocking on Monday as if a
digital Berlin Wall had just crumbled on their computer screens.Clawfoot tub faucets“Hurray, I came to Facebook without using VPN,” a user called Bita posted on her wall. “Thank you Rouhani!!!,” Nima wrote.
In
a twist of timing, an American Web-hosting company recently shut down
the Web site of Mehdi Karroubi, an opposition leader who has been under
house arrest since February 2011, to comply with United States sanctions
that block hosting any site with the domain .ir, for Iran, Reuters
reported Monday.In Iran, Internet censorship is the responsibility of
the Supreme Council for Cyberspace, which has made millions of Web pages
off limits for Iranians, including the Web site of The New York Times. A
special police unit visits Internet users at home,carbon fabric especially in smaller cities, and warns them not to try to visit blocked sites.
It
was especially difficult to sidestep the firewall in June, around the
time of the Iranian presidential election. In the days before the vote,
supporters of the outgoing president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, fought for
hours with officials at an Internet filtering center when several sites
favoring Mr. Ahmadinejad were blocked.Several hard-line politicians have
made public comments in recent days calling Facebook “a Zionist tool,”
but the fact that it was accessible in Iran on Monday suggested that the
censorship council, which Mr. Rouhani heads, might have decided
otherwise.ChandelierStill,
the government has sometimes let the firewall blocking Facebook and
Twitter slip open briefly by mistake, and some Iranians cautioned that
the opening on Monday, too, might be just a glitch.
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