Iran on Monday removed online blocks on Gmail but a government
Internet filtering committee official said other, additional censorship
was being prepared against YouTube, according to reports.
Internet users in Iran found themselves able to freely access their
Gmail accounts for the first time since the blocks were suddenly
established on September 24.
The secure-protocol HTTPS version of Google search was also made
accessible after being blocked at the same time. The unsecure HTTP
version of Google search was never blocked.
Abdolsamad Khoramabadi, the secretary of an official group tasked
with detecting Internet content deemed illegal, had said in a message
last week that "Google and Gmail will be filtered nationwide... until
further notice."
But Mohammad Reza Miri, a member of the telecommunications ministry
committee tasked with filtering the Internet in Iran, was quoted on
Monday by the Mehr news agency as saying the Gmail block was an
"involuntary" consequence of trying to reinforce censorship of Google's
YouTube video-sharing site.
"Unfortunately, we do not yet have enough technical knowhow to
differentiate between these two services. We wanted to block YouTube and
Gmail was also blocked, which was involuntary," he said.
"We absolutely do not want YouTube to be accessible. That is why the
telecommunications ministry is seeking a solution to fix the problem to
block YouTube under the HTTPS protocol while leaving Gmail accessible.
That will soon happen."
Iran has censored YouTube since mid-2009, after opposition
demonstrators protesting the re-election victory of President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad in polls they believed rigged started posting videos online
of their gatherings.
A Google website
which monitors the amount of traffic for its services in each country
shows YouTube has been effectively censored in Iran since then.
A member of Iran's High Council on Cyberspace, which provides policy
advice, Kamyar Saghafi, was quoted by Mehr last week suggesting that the
action against Google services was "to boycott" the US company over an
anti-Islam film available on YouTube that has sparked Muslim protests
worldwide.
Iran has an estimated 34 million Internet users, and the restrictions
on Gmail and Google search were met with criticism from some quarters.
Hossein Entezami, the representative of newspaper directors on Iran's
press monitoring commission, said they "showed decision-makers have
little knowledge of society's needs today, because you can't just close a
search engine and a form of communication for the people," Mehr last
week reported.
Iran is developing its own, closed version of the Internet for use in
the country which it says will be clear of any content deemed
un-Islamic. Officials have said that, at least initially, the Iran
intranet will exist alongside the filtered Internet and not replace it.
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