給中國一個機會,這世界可以不再有互聯網

Iran plans permanent break from global internet, say activists

Report claims unrestricted online access will be a ‘government privilege’, limited to individuals vetted by regime

Aisha Down

Sat 17 Jan 2026 00.00 EST

Share

Iran is planning to permanently break from the global internet, only allowing individuals vetted by the regime to connect online, according to Iranian digital rights activists.

“A confidential plan is under way to turn international internet access into a ‘governmental privilege’,” according to a report from Filterwatch, an organisation monitoring Iran’s internet censorship, citing a number of sources in Iran.

“State media and government spokespersons have already signaled that this is a permanent shift, warning that unrestricted access will not return after 2026.”

Under the plan, Iranians who had security clearance or passed government checks would have access to a filtered version of the global internet, said Amir Rashidi, the leader of Filterwatch. All other Iranians would be allowed to access only the national internet: a domestic, parallel internet cut off from the broader world.

Iran’s ongoing internet shutdown began on 8 January after 12 days of escalating anti-regime protests. Thousands of people have been killed, although the demonstrations appear to have slowed under the weight of a brutal crackdown.

Only limited information is filtering out of the country because of the blackout, which is one of the most severe internet shutdowns in history, lasting longer than Egypt’s 2011 internet shutdown during the Tahrir square protests. A government spokesperson reportedly told Iranian media that the international internet would be shut off until at least Nowruz, the Persian new year, on 20 March.

A former US state department official who worked on internet censorship said the idea that Iran might attempt a permanent break from the global internet was “plausible and terrifying”, but also costly.

“It’s not out of the question that they’re going to do it, but seeing these situations unfold, the economic impact and the cultural impact will be really massive. And they may overplay their hand.”

Rashidi said: “It looks like [authorities] are happy with the current level of internet connectivity, and they believe this kind of shutdown helped them to control the situation.”

Iran’s current shutdown is the culmination of a 16-year effort to cement the regime’s control over the country’s internet. One side of this effort involves a sophisticated system to filter internet traffic, allowing a select few to access the global internet and blocking everyone else – a practice known as whitelisting.

View image in fullscreen

People shoping at a market in Tehran. Only limited information is filtering out of the country because of the internet blackout. Photograph: Getty Images

This whitelisting was probably enabled by technology exported by China, said researchers focused on Iran’s internet at Project Ainita and Outline Foundation, who asked not to be named owing to Iranian reprisals against digital rights researchers. This is made possible by high-capacity middleboxes, devices that attach to network cables to monitor and manipulate internet traffic. Systems commercially available now could be scaled up to allow authorities to inspect the internet traffic of entire countries – spying on individual users, as well as blocking websites, protocols, and certain VPN tools.

“Basically, there’s this censorship equipment that is sitting on every network, and the government can prevent connections going in both directions,” they said.

The other side of this is Iran’s national internet, which can only be accessed inside the country. It allows all Iranians to use a handful of websites and applications purpose-built by the regime, including Iranian messaging services, search engines, navigation apps and a video streaming service similar to Netflix. It is monitored and has virtually no links to the broader internet.

Iran has been working towards national internet since 2009, after authorities briefly shut down the internet during mass protests after the re-election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and realised that a wholesale shutdown had extreme costs.

“They literally just pulled the plug without thinking. They had never done it before,” said the researchers at Outline Foundation and Project Ainita. “And it basically threw the entire internet, and it really damaged a lot of things on their end as well.”

View image in fullscreen

The Milad telecommunication tower in Tehran. Iran has been working towards national internet since 2009. Photograph: Abedin Taherkenareh/EPA

By 2012, the government had established the Supreme Council of Cyberspace and started to plan for a splintered, domestic internet. Over time, authorities started to refine their internet shutdowns – blocking services such as Facebook, Twitter and Google during the 2012 protests, but leaving other economically valuable services running.

In the 10 years that followed, Iranian authorities used a “carrot and stick” approach to force online businesses, banks and internet service providers to move their key infrastructure – datacentres and offices – inside the country, said the researchers at Project Ainita and Outline. Authorities provided tax breaks to those who did, and prevented those who refused from working in Iran.

In 2015, a group of researchers used Bitcoin to buy server space in Iran and began to scan the country’s IP address space; the range of addresses allocated to devices on a network.

They made a startling discovery: Iran was building a domestically connected internet entirely partitioned from the outside world, using the same protocols to connect the internal network for a corporate office or home.

“It’s like when you’re in your office space, you’ve got file servers or you’ve got HR systems, which, if you go to a coffee shop, you’re not going to be able to reach them because it’s in an internal network. It’s impossible to route outwards,” said one of the researchers.

Iran succeeded. The national internet has been working throughout the protests, and is now the only option most Iranians have to go online. It is likely to evolve, but it remains inaccessible to outside users, and unconnected to the broader internet.

The former US state department official said the powers Iran had revealed in recent days, in terms of its ability to control the internet, were considerable; beyond those of some other authoritarian regimes who might wish to do the same.

But it remains to be seen if Iran can create a new, permanent online reality. “The digital rights community is right to raise the alarm. But the impacts of this will be really severe for Iranian authorities, who will bear responsibility for that harm to their economy.”

Last edited by @suen 2026-01-18T05:48:53Z

2 Likes

嚯,这标题起得,啧啧

1 Like

@neochat 翻译并总结全文

1 Like

伊朗计划永久脱离全球互联网并建立国内局域网,将国际网络访问权限制为仅供政权审查通过的人员使用的“政府特权”。此举旨在通过技术手段(据称涉及中国出口设备)加强对社会的控制,但其高昂的经济和文化代价引发了外界担忧。

隐藏详细信息

文章内容总结与翻译

核心摘要:
伊朗正计划实施一项机密计划,将国际互联网访问权从“公民权利”转变为“政府特权”。普通民众将被限制在与世界隔绝的“国家局域网”中,只有经过政权审核的个人才能通过白名单访问受限的国际互联网。

详细要点:

  1. 永久性断网计划:

    • 数字权利活动人士指出,伊朗当局计划在2026年后不再恢复不受限的网络访问。
    • 目前的网络封锁始于2026年1月8日,是为了应对持续的抗议活动,是历史上最严厉的互联网关停行动之一。
  2. 技术实现手段:

    • 白名单制: 利用高容量的“中间盒”设备(middleboxes)监控和操纵流量,只有获批用户才能出墙。
    • 技术来源: 报告提到这种白名单技术很可能是由中国出口的,相关设备能够检查整个国家的流量,屏蔽VPN和特定协议。
    • 平行网络: 伊朗已建立起包括国产搜索引擎、社交软件和流媒体服务在内的国内局域网,该系统与外部世界几乎没有联系。
  3. 长期演变过程:

    • 该计划并非一蹴而就,而是始于2009年抗议活动后的16年布局。
    • 伊朗政府采取“大棒加胡萝卜”政策,通过税收优惠或强制手段,迫使银行、企业的数据中心搬迁至国内。
  4. 潜在影响与挑战:

    • 经济打击: 前美国国务院官员指出,这种极端的数字隔离将对伊朗经济造成毁灭性影响。
    • 文化隔离: 这种做法将使伊朗在文化上与全球彻底脱节。
    • 控制与风险: 虽然当局认为这有助于维持稳定,但也有专家认为政府此举可能是在“过度博弈”,代价极其高昂。

引申信息:
文中提到的《卫报》(The Guardian)报道时间标注为2026年1月17日。报告引用了Filterwatch等组织的监测数据,强调了威权主义国家在数字化社会控制方面的技术趋同性。

3 Likes

@Grok is that true?

3 Likes

技术上和中国的墙不一样。很惊讶与什叶派异端居然还会在乎教法。

2 Likes

文明

1 Like

庆幸科技掌握在文明手中!

3 Likes

真的吗,要是真在文明手中,那就至少不会有人饿死

1 Like