March 29, 2006
MOVABLE TYPE SPARKS ANOTHER REFORMATION (via M Ali Choudhury):
Iran Hard-Line Regime Cracks Down on Blogs (LARA SUKHTIAN, 3/28/06, Associated Press)
The Iranian blogging community, known as Weblogistan, is relatively new. It sprang to life in 2001 after hard-liners — fighting back against a reformist president — shut down more than 100 newspapers and magazines and detained writers. At the time, Derakhshan posted instructions on the Internet in Farsi on how to set up a weblog.Posted by Orrin Judd at March 29, 2006 7:57 AMSince then, the community has grown dramatically. Although exact figures are not known, experts estimate there are between 70,000 and 100,000 active weblogs in Iran. The vast majority are in Farsi but a few are in English.
Overall, the percentage of Iranians now blogging is "gigantic," said Curt Hopkins, director of an online group called the Committee to Protect Bloggers, who lives in Seattle.
"They are a talking people, very intellectual, social, and have a lot to say. And they are up against a small group (in the government) that are trying to shut everyone up," said Hopkins.
To bolster its campaign, the Iranian government has one of the most extensive and sophisticated operations to censor and filter Internet content of any country in the world — second only to China, Hopkins said.
It also is one of a growing number of Mideast countries that rely on U.S. commercial software to do the filtering, according to a 2004 study by a group called the OpenNet Initiative. The software that Iran uses blocks both internationally hosted sites in English and local sites in Farsi, the study found.
The Iranian blogging community, known as Weblogistan, is relatively new. It sprang to life in 2001....
And reading stops.
Posted by: David Cohen at March 29, 2006 8:08 AMDavid:
Which is why the internet will prove to be a greater invention than the printing press. (Insert appropriate AL Gore joke.) Information wants to be free and the internet makes it difficult to impossible to keep it caged.
Posted by: Rick T. at March 29, 2006 9:02 AMThis may be the break we're looking for.
Posted by: Genecis at March 29, 2006 10:04 AM