“The Mirror has Two Faces”: The Islamic Republic’s Dual Policy toward the Internet

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This article is featured in Orient IV/2013.

SKU: HENDELMAN-BAAVUR-4/2013 Category:

Description

Hassan Rouhani’s sweeping victory in the election for presidency in June 2013 was soon followed by
high-profile declarations of his political manifesto to recover Iran’s international standing, improve its
economy, and solve the country’s social dilemmas. On various occasions during his campaign and after
his election, Rouhani spoke of the need to reduce government intervention in people’s private lives and
to increase transparency in addressing the country’s problems, the significance of gender equality in
rights and opportunities, and the futility of the country’s current internet censorship policy.
Coinciding with the president-elect’s advocacy of reducing Iran’s Internet restrictions, the Ministry of Information
and Communications Technology (MICT), announced the launch of the country’s “national
email” service. Provided by the state’s post company, Iran email-meli is set to assign an individual email
address to every citizen for “security and privacy” purposes, with the intention of “improving” the interaction
between the authorities and the country’s 42 million reported Internet users (comprising more
than half of Iran’s population). This initiative is part of the Islamic Republic’s ongoing efforts to establish
a “clean” and “moral” national intranet. However, many of Iran’s savvy internet-users suspect the
government and security agencies intend to further increase their web control, and that the MCIT’s development
of the domestic Internet, announced in 2011, actually designed to serve as a filternet.
This article focuses on the Islamic Republic’s dual policy toward the Internet. On the one hand, Iran’s
leadership aims to develop and expand local ICT services to promote its regional and international interests
and priorities, especially in response to the country’s ongoing “soft-war” with the West. The
regime also invests and trains the country’s younger generation in and through the use of advanced
technologies, with the additional aim of projecting a democratic image. On the other hand, Iranian authorities
are making arduous efforts to maintain high levels of control and censorship over the local
media, including the Internet.

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