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Iran blocked the Internet, then butchered its protestors. What's the lesson for activists?

"We did new graphs and they confirm the evolution towards one single point of interconnection between Iran’s domestic network and the global Internet..."
Iran blocked the Internet, then butchered its protestors. What's the lesson for activists?

Iran dropped off the internet. Not long after, the killings spiked. 

But this was not just a case of a government flipping a switch to avoid surveillance. The story of Iran's recent internet blackout goes back decades, and starts with economically ruinous attempts that have evolved into something far more dangerous: a brutally effective system of selective censorship.

By 2019, it had built a sophisticated 'kill switch' to fully or selectively disconnect Iran from the global Internet, with its conduit to the outside world built around three autonomous systems (ASes). This year its shutdown was even more complete. Activists say it requires a global response.

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