In base ai rapporti di Filterwatch ripresi anche dal The Guardian, il regime iraniano starebbe sviluppando un piano per trasformare l’accesso al web globale in un “privilegio governativo”.
Invece di...
To the OP: since diggita uses Lemmy, I’d suggest setting the post language to Italian when posting in that language. That’d let users leverage their instances’ language filter settings.
And a translation by Google of the article:
Beyond the blackout: Digital Apartheid is born
According to Filterwatch reports also reported by The Guardian, the Iranian regime is developing a plan to turn access to the global web into a "government privilege".
Instead of blocking specific sites, the regime is reportedly implementing a “white list”: that way, only domestic services hosted on the National Information Network (NIN) would be allowed tofunction.
Access to the web could only be granted to previously "screened"and authorized individuals and institutions, creating a system of digital apartheid.
According to some testimonies, it seems that the network seems active (the signal icon is there), but the data does not flow or the connection "pulses" (disconnects every few seconds), a technique used to discourage the use of VPNs.
The report would confirm the total collapse of e-commerce and domestic logistics as “collateral damage” necessary to maintain political control and prevent protest coordination by completing the infrastructure necessary for a permanent detachment from the World Wide Web, replacing it with a fully surveilled national network.
It could be the endof the “open” internet in Iran, replaced by a closed network that serves as both a tool of surveillance and a weapon of political isolation.```
To the OP: since diggita uses Lemmy, I’d suggest setting the post language to Italian when posting in that language. That’d let users leverage their instances’ language filter settings.
And a translation by Google of the article:
Beyond the blackout: Digital Apartheid is born According to Filterwatch reports also reported by The Guardian, the Iranian regime is developing a plan to turn access to the global web into a "government privilege". Instead of blocking specific sites, the regime is reportedly implementing a “white list”: that way, only domestic services hosted on the National Information Network (NIN) would be allowed to function. Access to the web could only be granted to previously "screened" and authorized individuals and institutions, creating a system of digital apartheid. According to some testimonies, it seems that the network seems active (the signal icon is there), but the data does not flow or the connection "pulses" (disconnects every few seconds), a technique used to discourage the use of VPNs. The report would confirm the total collapse of e-commerce and domestic logistics as “collateral damage” necessary to maintain political control and prevent protest coordination by completing the infrastructure necessary for a permanent detachment from the World Wide Web, replacing it with a fully surveilled national network. It could be the end of the “open” internet in Iran, replaced by a closed network that serves as both a tool of surveillance and a weapon of political isolation.```Thanks for your comment. I usually select the language, but this time it showed Italian as language not allowed.
I’ll take the suggestion to heart and try to figure out why next time.
So, like North Korea.