The Journal of Theory

A Digest for Hesitant Generalists

THEORY: Electronic information sharing is only becoming more difficult in Iran

Remember when Google’s shuttering of Reader’s social features destroyed Iranians’ last best hope at uncensored communication and information sharing (via a little bit of hyperbole)? Now, in another blow, Herdict reports that VPNs have been banned in Iran:

Iran’s Minister of Communications and Technology Reza Taghipour announced the VPN usage would be criminalized in the country. In the past, Iranians had frequently used VPNs to bypass strict content controls to access blocked sites such as Facebook and Gmail. Earlier in the month, Iranians noticed increased difficulties with accessing their VPN accounts after the government ordered that VPNs be disconnected.

Iran’s decision to ban VPNs comes as the most recent measure taken against what the Iranian government claims is a cultural ‘soft war’ between Islamic countries and the West. …

It is unclear, however, whether or not the criminalization of VPNs will have its intended chilling effects. This past summer, Iran declared a ban on satellite dishes, which Iranians have continued to use. Moreover, as Iranian journalist Hadi Nili has pointed out, preventing people from using VPNs will still be difficult, “There will always be new ways to bypass measures by the government,” he says.

Iranians should be able to find a way around this latest attempt to censor free communication, but still, these guys can’t catch a break.

THEORY: Not even the Internet can keep up with China

I have touched Qingchui Peak (“Thumb Mountain”) in Chengde (above) and thus will live to hundreds of years old. This may leave me enough time to digest what has happened in China in the past two weeks alone. Some of the more interesting stories:

- Minimum wage hike coming to manufacturing hub Guangdong on 1/1:  BoingBoing
- Let them debate cake/the Chongqing versus Guangdong models: NPR
- Chinese IT firms mutually agree to “curb” “harmful” information spread online: AFP
- Almost 60,000 typically wealthy Chinese per year seek medical services overseas: China Daily
- U Michigan discovers paper-cut propaganda posters from Cultural Revolution: The History Blog

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