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Iran's internet shutdown is more selective and may last some time
Summary
A widespread outage has lasted about 36 hours, with external monitors reporting roughly a 90% drop in internet traffic while some official accounts and sites remain reachable.
Content
Iran's internet has been largely shut down for about 36 hours as authorities respond to widening anti-government protests. External monitoring described a roughly 90% drop in international internet traffic, and domestic mobile service and many international calls were reported as unavailable. Experts characterize the disruption as more selective and technically precise than earlier blackouts in the country. Some government-linked channels and sites remained reachable during the outage.
What is known:
- The disruption has been in place for roughly 36 hours and external data showed about a 90% reduction in internet traffic.
- Domestic mobile networks and many international voice calls were reported as unavailable.
- Some government-related accounts and certain websites remained accessible, including posts from the supreme leader on X.
- Reports indicate satellite internet services such as Starlink were disrupted in some areas.
Summary:
Experts say the authorities appear to be using finer‑grained controls that allow selected communications while blocking broader access, which could enable a sustained, degraded network state. Undetermined at this time.
