Iranian internet blackout (2019): Difference between revisions
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|23 November 2019 |
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|March 2011 |
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! scope="row"|Actor |
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|Iran |
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|Individual based in Georgia |
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! scope="row"|Victims |
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|Armenia, Azerbaijan |
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! scope="row"|Target systems |
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|Internet service providers in Iran |
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|International fibre optic cable in Georgia |
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! scope="row"|Method |
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|In response to protests, the Iranian Government ordered a week-long internet blackout. Some networks had entirely withdrawn their traffic routes, while some only blocked traffic.<ref>Doug Madory, ‘[https://blogs.oracle.com/internetintelligence/historic-internet-blackout-in-iran Historic Internet Blackout in Iran]’ (Oracle Blogs, 18 November 2019).</ref> Through the blackout, the Iranian ‘national information network’, i.e. the internal network infrastructure, was still maintained and was accessible.<ref>Al Jazeera, ‘[https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2019/11/27/after-internet-blackout-iranians-take-stock After Internet Blackout, Iranians Take Stock]’ Al Jazeera (Tehran, 27 November 2019).</ref> |
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|In March 2011, a person in Georgia accidentally damaged an international fibre optic cable that connected parts of Caucasus with Europe.<ref name=":1">Giorgi Lomsadze, ‘A Shovel Cuts Off Armenia’s Internet’ Wall Street Journal (8 April 2011) <[https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748704630004576249013084603344 https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748704630004576249013084603344]> accessed 11 February 2021.</ref> |
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! scope="row"|Purpose |
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|To quell internal protests |
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! scope="row"|Result |
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|While Iranians were deeply affected, whether the blackout affected other jurisdictions has not been widely reported. |
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|The incident caused a 12 hour internet outage in Armenia, with partial disruptions in Georgia and Azerbaijan.<ref name=":1" /> |
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! scope="row"|Aftermath |
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Revision as of 15:38, 17 September 2021
Date | 23 November 2019 |
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Actor | Iran |
Victims | N/A |
Target systems | Internet service providers in Iran |
Method | In response to protests, the Iranian Government ordered a week-long internet blackout. Some networks had entirely withdrawn their traffic routes, while some only blocked traffic.[1] Through the blackout, the Iranian ‘national information network’, i.e. the internal network infrastructure, was still maintained and was accessible.[2] |
Purpose | To quell internal protests |
Result | While Iranians were deeply affected, whether the blackout affected other jurisdictions has not been widely reported. |
Aftermath | N/A |
Analysed in | Scenario 24: Internet blockage |
Collected by: Gurshabad Grover & Arindrajit Basu
- ↑ Doug Madory, ‘Historic Internet Blackout in Iran’ (Oracle Blogs, 18 November 2019).
- ↑ Al Jazeera, ‘After Internet Blackout, Iranians Take Stock’ Al Jazeera (Tehran, 27 November 2019).