Election Protests in Iran Turn Bloody and word gets out on Twitter

HB1965

Litster
Joined
Jun 1, 2007
Posts
27,794
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/16/world/middleeast/16media.html?_r=1&hp
Social Networks Spread Iranian Defiance Online
Newsha Tavakolian/Polaris, for The New York Times

Hundreds of thousands of Iranians marching in support for the presidential opposition candidate Mir Hussein Moussavi.
Article Tools Sponsored By
By BRAD STONE and NOAM COHEN
Published: June 15, 2009

As the embattled government of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad appears to be trying to limit Internet access and communications in Iran, new kinds of social media are challenging those traditional levers of state media control and allowing Iranians to find novel ways around the restrictions.
Skip to next paragraph

Follow the latest updates on The Times' news blog, The Lede.

Iranians are blogging, posting to Facebook and, most visibly, coordinating their protests on Twitter, the messaging service. Their activity has increased, not decreased, since the presidential elections on Friday and ensuing attempts by the government to restrict or censor their online communications.

On Twitter, reports and links to photos from a peaceful mass march through Tehran on Monday, along with accounts of street fighting and casualties around the country, have become the most popular topic on the service worldwide, according to Twitter’s published statistics.

A couple of Twitter feeds have become virtual media offices for the supporters of the leading opposition candidate, Mir Hussein Moussavi. One feed, mousavi1388, (1388 is the year in the Persian calendar) is filled with news of protests and exhortations to keep up the fight, in Persian and English. It has more than 7,000 followers.

Mr. Moussavi’s fan group on Facebook has swelled to over 50,000 members, a significant increase since election day.

Labeling such seemingly spontaneous antigovernment demonstrations a “Twitter Revolution” has already become something of a cliché. That title was already given to the protests in Moldova in April.

But Twitter is aware of the power of its service. Acknowledging its role on the global stage, the San Francisco-based company said Monday that it was delaying a planned shutdown for maintenance for a day, citing “the role Twitter is currently playing as an important communication tool in Iran.”

Twitter users are posting messages, known as tweets, with the term #IranElection, which allows users to search for all tweets on the subject. On Monday evening, Twitter was registering about 30 new posts a minute with that tag.

One read, “We have no national press coverage in Iran, everyone should help spread Moussavi’s message. One Person = One Broadcaster. #IranElection.”

The Twitter feed StopAhmadi calls itself the “Dedicated Twitter account for Moussavi supporters” and has more than 6,000 followers. It too sends visitors to the Flickr feed from the rally.

The feed Persiankiwi, which has more than 15,000 followers, sends users to a page in Persian that is hosted by Google and, in its only English text, says, “Due to widespread filters in Iran, please view this site to receive the latest news, letters and communications from Mir Hussein Moussavi.”

Some Twitter users were also going on the offensive. On Monday morning, an antigovernment activist using the Twitter account “DDOSIran” asked supporters to visit a Web site to participate in an online attack to try to crash government Web sites by overwhelming them with traffic.

By Monday afternoon, many of those sites were not accessible, though it was not clear if the attack was responsible — and the Twitter account behind the attack had been removed. A Twitter spokeswoman said the company had no connection to the deletion of the account.

The crackdown on communications began on election day, when text-messaging services were shut down in what opposition supporters said was an attempt to block one of their most important organizing tools. Over the weekend, cellphone transmissions and access to Facebook and some other Web sites were also blocked.

Iranians continued to report on Monday that they could not send text messages.

But it appears they are finding ways around Big Brother.

Many Twitter users have been sharing ways to evade government snooping, such as programming their Web browsers to contact a proxy — or an Internet server that relays their connection through another country.

Austin Heap, a 25 year old IT consultant in San Francisco, is running his own private proxies to help Iranians, and advertising them on Twitter. He said on Monday that his servers were providing the Internet connections for about 750 Iranians at any one moment.

“I think that cyber activism can be a way to empower people living under less than democratic governments around the world,” he said.

Global Internet Freedom Consortium, an Internet proxy service with ties to the banned Chinese spiritual movement Falun Gong, offers downloadable software to help evade censorship. It said its traffic from Iran had tripled in the last week.

Shiyu Zhou, founder of the organization, has no idea how links to the software spread within Iran. “In China we have sent mass e-mails, but nothing like in Iran,” he said. “The Iranian people actually found out by themselves and have passed this on by word of mouth.”

Jonathan Zittrain, a professor at Harvard Law School who is an expert on the Internet, said that Twitter was particularly resilient to censorship because it had so many ways to for its posts to originate — from a phone, a Web browser or specialized applications — and so many outlets for those posts to appear.

As each new home for this material becomes a new target for censorship, he said, a repressive system faces a game of whack-a-mole in blocking Internet address after Internet address carrying the subversive material.

“It is easy for Twitter feeds to be echoed everywhere else in the world,” he said. “The qualities that make Twitter seem and inane and half-baked are what makes it so powerful.”

___________________
Apparently Twitter is all a buzz with this. There are links to photos of killings there that were taken with cell phone cameras


Another site covering the protest
http://iran.twazzup.com/
 
I heard a pre-vote prediction that this was close race. The figures surprised me somewhat.
 
Apparently Twitter is all a buzz with this. There are links to photos of killings there that were taken with cell phone cameras

Twitter is hardly a credible source of any kind of news. Its easily spammed with propaganda by shills using multiple account names. This is only one of the many software tools for doing this
Hummingbird (Twitter tool) Note the ability to manage "multiple" Twitter accounts

Look at this screencap from Twitter. Someone is using multiple twitter accounts to feed the same identical message into twitter over and over and over.
http://whatreallyhappened.com/IMAGES/twitterpropaganda.jpg

These are not individual Iranians; THIS IS A PROPAGANDA OPERATION!

Right-wing Israeli interests are engaged in an all out Twitter attack with hopes of delegitimizing the Iranian election and causing political instability within Iran.
Proof: Israeli Effort to Destabilize Iran Via Twitter

I think the Iranians have made their choice though the USA/Israel would have wished otherwise. Democracy does not mean an Israeli/Zionist favoured candidate wins.
 
Pre-election Iranian poll showed Ahmadinejad support
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.as...01_NOOTR_RTRMDNC_0_-403433-1&sec=Worldupdates

A poll of Iran's electorate three weeks before its election showed President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad leading by a 2-to-1 ratio, a landslide win would'e been expected. The poll shows that it's most likely that win by Ahmadinejad is the actual will of the people and is not the product of fraud.

What we are seeing in the Western media is very similar to the propaganda and astroturfing (fake grassroots campaigns) used in other nations that Western intelliigence agencies used in attempts to topple democratically elected governments.

They did it in Venezuela, and failed, The following is a good example of how a "popular revolt" is manufactured by covert means.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=5832390545689805144
 
Twitter is hardly a credible source of any kind of news. Its easily spammed with propaganda by shills using multiple account names. This is only one of the many software tools for doing this
Hummingbird (Twitter tool) Note the ability to manage "multiple" Twitter accounts

Look at this screencap from Twitter. Someone is using multiple twitter accounts to feed the same identical message into twitter over and over and over.
http://whatreallyhappened.com/IMAGES/twitterpropaganda.jpg

These are not individual Iranians; THIS IS A PROPAGANDA OPERATION!

Right-wing Israeli interests are engaged in an all out Twitter attack with hopes of delegitimizing the Iranian election and causing political instability within Iran.
Proof: Israeli Effort to Destabilize Iran Via Twitter

I think the Iranians have made their choice though the USA/Israel would have wished otherwise. Democracy does not mean an Israeli/Zionist favoured candidate wins.
Perhaps the information is coming from people there. Photos are being taken by people there. They aren't pretty
 
DUMMY,

Its ALL THE JEWS FAULT

All the KILLINGS you see are STAGED in a JEW MOVIE STUDIO

How can you fall for this?

DO YOU LOVE JEWS OR SOMETHING?
 
Don't care.

You didn't care when Saddam was pulling the same crap; it's none of our business, those idiots are begging to be shot/executed. We should be polite and look the other way like we did with Saddam (as per CNN's OWN confession).

It's time we stopped meddling with the internal affairs of other countries. We need to raise our standing in the world as something other than an over-bearing bully...
 
Pre-election Iranian poll showed Ahmadinejad support
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.as...01_NOOTR_RTRMDNC_0_-403433-1&sec=Worldupdates

A poll of Iran's electorate three weeks before its election showed President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad leading by a 2-to-1 ratio, a landslide win would'e been expected. The poll shows that it's most likely that win by Ahmadinejad is the actual will of the people and is not the product of fraud.

What we are seeing in the Western media is very similar to the propaganda and astroturfing (fake grassroots campaigns) used in other nations that Western intelliigence agencies used in attempts to topple democratically elected governments.

They did it in Venezuela, and failed, The following is a good example of how a "popular revolt" is manufactured by covert means.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=5832390545689805144

Yeah, like Bush, Powell and Rummy!

WMD picture show...
 
No one is getting this. It's actually happening that protesters are being shot and beat up. Our journalist are have been locked in their hotels and their credentitials taken away. The only way this information is gettting out is via Twitter and the government their is trying to stop it. They are shutting down servers. This isn't isome scam being run by our government. People are being massacured
 
No one is getting this. It's actually happening that protesters are being shot and beat up. Our journalist are have been locked in their hotels and their credentitials taken away. The only way this information is gettting out is via Twitter and the government their is trying to stop it. They are shutting down servers. This isn't isome scam being run by our government. People are being massacured

Well we wouldn't want people to get masscured.
 
No one is getting this. It's actually happening that protesters are being shot and beat up. Our journalist are have been locked in their hotels and their credentitials taken away. The only way this information is gettting out is via Twitter and the government their is trying to stop it. They are shutting down servers. This isn't isome scam being run by our government. People are being massacured

The only people that have been shot so far was when a crowd of demonstrators tried to storm the headquarters of one of the religious militias.

However, the BBC is reporting troops on the streets tonight for the first time.
 
The only people that have been shot so far was when a crowd of demonstrators tried to storm the headquarters of one of the religious militias.

However, the BBC is reporting troops on the streets tonight for the first time.

That's not possible because the only news coming out is through twitter. Didn't you read the thread?
 
I was skeptical last night when I heard about twitter as a news source for the Iranian election, and I still am.
 
I was skeptical last night when I heard about twitter as a news source for the Iranian election, and I still am.

Actually, the beeb did say that Twitter and Facebook are being used to communicate in Iran. A lot of the protestors are relatively young and tech savvy.
 
Actually, the beeb did say that Twitter and Facebook are being used to communicate in Iran. A lot of the protestors are relatively young and tech savvy.

I'm sure, but that doesn't mean I should believe everything I read. There is no way for me to authenticate anything which is communicated by twitter. Why should I take it all at face value? I find it very weird to look at some of those Iranian twitter accounts which are exclusively written in English. Don't they have any friends and loved ones who read Persian? Bilingual tweets I can see...

Not that this matters much; I just make it a policy to not believe everything that comes out of everyone's mouth (or computer or phone). I'll accept the general sense of things, but that's it.
 
Be skeptical about it all you want the people reporting it there are the people living it, and supposedly there are more being killed then those that stormed the temple. This huge. The protesters are doing things that DEFY Muslim law. This is now not only a politcal revolt but a spiritual one
 
Be skeptical about it all you want the people reporting it there are the people living it, and supposedly there are more being killed then those that stormed the temple. This huge. The protesters are doing things that DEFY Muslim law. This is now not only a politcal revolt but a spiritual one

I'm not saying it isn't. I'm just saying I don't believe everything I read on Twitter.
 
Back
Top