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In the wake of Iran's statistically and historically dubious election results, the world has been glued to screens (both TV and IP) watching the unfolding protests and violence. Despite a complete media
and communications blackout, the videos, photos and messages are leaking out continuously. But how are all these leaks occurring?
The Iranian government has deep content inspection, full control of both data and voice networks, firewalls and intrusion-prevention systems. On top of that, the Iranian government has police, military and armed thugs, comprehensive border control, nasty prisons
(allegedly) and the death penalty for far lesser offenses than insurrection and treason. Yet the images still flow. Witness the failure of perimeter controls and data-leakage prevention on your screens, in near real time.
The Iranian protests show clearly that where there is a will there is a way, especially when the will goes as far as risking
life and limb for liberty. From that perspective, security must always be weighed against the budget, motivation and potential
gain of an attacker. In the case of Iran, no security investment (technological or institutional) will match the will and
power of millions of determined people seeking their freedom.
Ask a security expert or a geek about how to organize info-resistance at this scale and they will probably come up with a
pretty sophisticated solution. Something involving encryption, onion routing (tor), satellite dishes and PGP. Yet, what we
see in these security scenarios is that most successful means of bypassing security (whether for good or evil) are remarkably
simple. Boxcutters and duct tape, SD cards passed from hand to hand. Simple works better in this case because the Iranians
can only shut down parts of their communication networks. The government and security forces need phones, local and international,
as much as the protesters do. So there are a myriad ways that the blocks can be bypassed.
The problem here is that the government has to focus its interdiction whereas the protesters can use diffuse means. Where
the government blocks technology X, they leave everything-except-X open. The universe of open is infinitely larger that the
things they can block and monitor. The problem for the Iranian government is that there are millions of people with cameras
on their phones. It was reported this week that Nokia provided some of the technology used for filtering the Internet in Iran.
But Nokia also happens to be the biggest manufacturer of cameras in the world -- bigger than Kodak or Canon or Fuji combined.
So what Nokia allegedly took away in terms of filtering, it gave back a thousand-fold with its camera phones. When you combine
people-powered journalism (sous-veillance – "watching from below") with global telecommunications there is no technology in
the world that can keep information from spreading.
Comments (3)
Shame on WestBy From Iran on June 25, 2009, 5:24 amShame on Western company like Nokia that they buy filtering technology to IRAN regime.company like nokia just want to increase their profit.
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I agree. Shame on them with their bloody capitalism...By Anonymous on June 28, 2009, 6:25 pmI agree. Shame on them with their bloody capitalism. It's not just Nokia, it's them all. Everybody just want more and more! - and that is nonsense, it is not possible.
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Nokia is only really aBy Someone with a clue on June 30, 2009, 3:25 pmNokia is only really a "Western" company in the fact that it's owned by the Finnish which happens to be east of Iran. Trying to blame the United States for this...
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