
The Conversation Weekly How Iran shut down the internet
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Jan 29, 2026 Amin Naeni, a PhD researcher on digital authoritarianism, explains how Iran built a national internet to control information. He outlines three-week blackouts, comparisons with China, and the mechanics of tiered access and white SIMs. He also discusses VPNs, Starlink limits, and how past shutdowns tested the system.
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Information Vacuum Enabled A Brutal Crackdown
- Iran's multi-week internet blackout created an "information vacuum" for over 85 million people.
- The shutdown enabled a brutal crackdown while only government-approved services remained online.
A Centralised Council Runs Digital Policy
- The Supreme Council of Cyberspace centralised control, deciding blocks and promoting local alternatives.
- The council includes top state figures personally appointed by Supreme Leader Khamenei.
National Internet Splits Domestic And Global Access
- Iran's 'national internet' splits domestic from international traffic with local servers and platforms.
- The state fully controls domestic platforms, but most Iranians still use VPNs to reach global services.
