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How Iran Is Using the Protests to Block More Open Internet Access

2022-10-13
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For nearly a month Iranians have been fiercely and relentlessly protesting against their government. Sparked by the death of a 22-year-old woman in the custody of the country’s “morality police,” who arrested her for “inappropriate attire,” the demonstrations have been led by young women who refuse to accept restrictive laws such as hijab requirements. Authorities have been suppressing the protests with violence, as well as less tangible techniques. Amir Rashidi is director of digital rights and security at Miaan Group, an Austin, Tex.–based advocacy organization working to improve human rights in Iran. Rashidi, an Iranian who left the country in 2010, told Scientific American how its government has been using technology such as facial recognition and Internet shutdowns against its citizens.

[An edited transcript of the interview follows.]

How is Iran’s government using facial-recognition technology?

During the pandemic, we became aware that Iran is doing facial recognition. The Minister of Health announced that, in collaboration with the traffic police, they were using cameras in the street to take a picture of people who are not wearing masks properly and find them. Then [more than] two weeks [before] the protests, [an official] mentioned the use of facial recognition during the pandemic, and he [essentially] said, “We’re going to do the same with women, taking pictures of those who are not wearing proper hijab and then finding them.”

Iranian government officials are proud of having this kind of technology, always talking about it, and people are sensitive. If you look at a couple of videos of the protesters, they were attacking cameras. There is a fear that [facial recognition has been] implemented and is working. Not only are protesters more careful to not look at the camera and put the camera behind them, wearing masks and things like that; also the media are very careful to blur all the faces.

Can any techniques prevent facial recognition from working?

Looking at the experience of other countries, there are other techniques: shirts that you can wear with some specific graphic that can make [visual] “noise” on cameras or other methods. But none of them can be really promising right now in Iran because of the lack of information. Because we don’t know what kind of algorithm [the government is] using, we don’t know which solution we can use. One thing that we know is: there is a collaboration between the Iranian and Chinese governments regarding technology. Based on that, I can imagine that Iran is relying on China a lot for facial recognition. The model of Internet censorship in Iran is very much like Chinese models, so I wouldn’t be surprised if China provided that technology to Iran.

What is that model of Internet censorship?

What Iran is doing with the Internet is quite unique but, again, follows the same model as China. But I think what Iran is doing is way more advanced than what China or Russia are doing. The main goal is having a local network. Iranian government officials call it the National Information Network, or NIN. Usually in regular conversation, we refer to it as a “national Internet.” It is literally an intranet: a local network that is providing connection among different services inside the country, being independent from the rest of the world. So when [authorities] shut down the Internet, this local network is operating, but you don’t have access to the [global] Internet. The Russian government passed a law to create such a network [in 2019], but so far we are not seeing implementation.

This infrastructure also needs more tools and components to be functional. For example, [it requires] data centers. On the application layer, it needs messaging apps, e-mail services, search engines. China’s doing the same: it has Baidu, WeChat—these [services and] apps are under a lot of surveilling censorship. The Iranian government has its own YouTube, its own national search engine, e-mail service, messaging app, data centers, all of these things that make [online] infrastructure functional without being connected to the Internet. And finally, Iran is also passing a lot of laws to establish different bodies [that will] dictate how to use this infrastructure and these tools to achieve the main goal that it has, which is information control. It’s very much like the Chinese model in terms of localization, but because of that infrastructure and those policy-making bodies, it’s more advanced—and more successful in terms of censorship and information control. But I want to be careful [about making that claim] because I’m not an expert on China or Russia.

Are people using this national network when the government shuts down Internet access?

One of the things that the Iranian government is doing during the shutdown is taking advantage of violating people’s rights by encouraging them to use the local services. The Minister of [Information and Communications Technology] was on the TV, looking like he was proud and essentially saying, “We blocked WhatsApp because they violate our laws, so if you are concerned about your business, you have to move onto the national messaging app.” One national application is called Rubika…. We call these kinds of applications [such as Rubika and the Chinese program WeChat] “super apps” because you can do everything: purchase tickets, pay your bills, do live streaming, watch TV. They are [using the app to do] mass surveillance, and it’s not something that they want to hide! There is video of the head of Rubika explaining how its AI machine is so good that it can catch sensitive content on a chat between two people, and it can immediately remove [that content] from the platform. This is concerning, obviously. And I would say that’s the last line of defense against the national Internet: So far people are not using it because they’re concerned about privacy and security. But if the government is successful....

[Iran is also] encouraging people to use local services [through a unique] violation of net neutrality: separating local and international traffic. If you’re using local services, you have access to the faster network and cheaper traffic, almost half the price. If you want to use international traffic, it is slower and more expensive. With all of these things together, there is a chance that people, in particular during this economic crisis, feel, “Yeah, let’s move on to those local services.”

Are there techniques for getting around the Internet shutdowns?

In Iran, there is no promising solution. There are lots of conversations around using satellite Internet, but when the government doesn’t want people to have access to the satellite Internet, that’s not a reliable solution. Another solution is not Internet; it’s “data casting,” which is [used in] a project by NetFreedom Pioneers, an organization based in Los Angeles. [The organization is] sending data over normal satellite TV. A user in Iran can just connect the USB to their receiver, download the data and build a special application to unpack the data. And in that package, there are news and all of these circumvention tools that we are recommending to people. So there are some solutions. Unfortunately, they are not reliable to be distributed in a massive scale. But we need to dedicate and find more resources in terms of manpower, technologies, and money to study and see how we can find a solution that can actually be usable on a massive scale.

We have to study this national network and see how we can bypass it. There are a lot of studies going on by different Internet freedom communities, and we are collaborating with them. We found some solutions—but one of the issues is: everyone’s paying attention to the Internet shutdown when it’s happening. When it’s over, everyone’s now going back to the normal life. And that’s not the kind of mentality we need to have. The most important thing we have to do for the Internet shutdown is being ready before the Internet shuts down.

What else is important to know about this situation?

The international community see this as an issue only for Iran. But the problem is: there are a lot of governments all around the world who want to violate our rights, and they learn from each other. What I’d like to see is people paying attention to what is happening as a threat to freedom, to the right to access to the Internet, and deal with it in that way. Because if tomorrow China and Russia implement the same infrastructure [as Iran], the Internet is not going to be the Internet that we know today. It would be in the shape of a bunch of isolated islands. And the philosophy behind the Internet—which is connecting people to each other—would be destroyed.

参考译文
伊朗如何利用抗议活动阻止更开放的互联网接入
近一个月来,伊朗人一直在激烈而无情地抗议他们的政府。一名22岁的女子在该国“道德警察”羁押期间的死亡引发了示威活动,该警察以“着装不当”为由逮捕了她。领导示威活动的是拒绝接受诸如要求戴头巾等限制性法律的年轻女性。当局一直在用暴力和不太明显的手段镇压抗议活动。阿米尔·拉什迪(Amir Rashidi)是美安集团(Miaan Group)数字版权和安全主管。该组织致力于改善伊朗的人权。Rashidi是一名2010年离开伊朗的伊朗人,他告诉《科学美国人》,伊朗政府一直在使用面部识别和关闭互联网等技术来对付其公民。[以下是经过编辑的采访实录。伊朗政府是如何使用面部识别技术的?在疫情期间,我们意识到伊朗正在进行面部识别。卫生部长宣布,他们与交警合作,在街道上使用相机拍下那些戴口罩不当的人,并找到他们。抗议活动开始前两个多星期,一位官员提到在疫情期间使用面部识别技术,他说:“我们将对女性采取同样的措施,给那些没有戴头巾的人拍照,然后找到她们。”伊朗政府官员对拥有这种技术感到自豪,总是谈论它,而人们是敏感的。如果你看几段抗议者的视频,就会发现他们在攻击摄像头。人们担心(面部识别)已经实施,而且正在发挥作用。抗议者不仅更小心地不去看镜头,把镜头放在身后,戴上面具之类的东西;媒体也非常小心地模糊所有的脸。有什么技术能阻止面部识别工作吗?看看其他国家的经验,还有其他的技术:你可以穿带有特定图形的衬衫,在相机上制造(视觉)“噪音”或其他方法。但由于信息的缺乏,目前在伊朗没有任何一种方法是有希望的。因为我们不知道[政府]使用的是哪种算法,所以我们不知道可以使用哪种解决方案。我们知道的一件事是:伊朗和中国政府在技术方面有合作。基于此,我可以想象伊朗在面部识别方面非常依赖中国。伊朗的互联网审查模式非常像中国的模式,所以如果中国向伊朗提供这种技术,我不会感到惊讶。这种网络审查模式是什么?伊朗在互联网上所做的是相当独特的,但同样遵循了中国的模式。但我认为伊朗所做的要比中国或俄罗斯所做的先进得多。主要目标是建立一个本地网络。伊朗政府官员称其为国家信息网络(NIN)。通常在日常谈话中,我们把它称为“国家互联网”。它实际上是一个内部网:一个本地网络,在国内提供不同服务之间的连接,独立于世界其他地方。因此,当(当局)关闭互联网时,这个本地网络还在运行,但你无法访问[全球]互联网。俄罗斯政府(2019年)通过了一项创建这样一个网络的法律,但到目前为止我们还没有看到实施。 这个基础设施还需要更多的工具和组件才能发挥作用。例如,它需要数据中心。在应用层,它需要消息应用程序、电子邮件服务和搜索引擎。中国也在做同样的事情:它有百度、微信——这些[服务和]应用程序都处于大量的监视审查之下。伊朗政府有自己的YouTube,自己的国家搜索引擎,电子邮件服务,消息应用程序,数据中心,所有这些东西使[在线]基础设施在没有连接到互联网的情况下运行。最后,伊朗还通过了很多法律来建立不同的机构,这些机构将规定如何使用这些基础设施和工具来实现它的主要目标,那就是信息控制。在本地化方面,它与中国模式非常相似,但由于基础设施和决策机构的存在,它在审查和信息控制方面更加先进,也更加成功。但我要谨慎(提出这种说法),因为我不是中国或俄罗斯问题的专家。当政府关闭互联网接入时,人们还在使用这个国家网络吗?伊朗政府在停摆期间所做的一件事就是利用侵犯人民权利的机会鼓励他们使用当地服务。信息和通信技术部长出现在电视上,看起来很自豪,他说:“我们封锁WhatsApp是因为他们违反了我们的法律,所以如果你担心你的业务,你必须使用国家通讯应用程序。”一个全国性的应用程序叫做Rubika....我们把这类应用(比如鲁比卡和中国的微信)称为“超级应用”,因为你可以做任何事情:买票、付账单、做直播、看电视。他们正在(使用这款应用程序)进行大规模监控,这不是他们想要隐瞒的事情!有一段视频是关于Rubika的负责人如何解释其AI机器是如何如此优秀,它可以捕捉两个人聊天中的敏感内容,并立即从平台上删除(这些内容)。这显然令人担忧。我想说,这是对抗国家互联网的最后一道防线:到目前为止,人们还没有使用它,因为他们担心隐私和安全。但如果政府成功了....伊朗还鼓励人们使用本地服务,这一做法违反了网络中立性:将本地和国际通信分开。如果你使用本地服务,你可以访问更快的网络和更便宜的流量,几乎是一半的价格。如果你想使用国际交通,它会更慢,更贵。有了所有这些因素,人们,特别是在经济危机期间,有可能会觉得,“是的,让我们转向那些地方服务吧。”有什么技术可以避开网络关闭吗?在伊朗,没有什么有希望的解决方案。有很多关于使用卫星互联网的对话,但当政府不希望人们访问卫星互联网时,这不是一个可靠的解决方案。另一个解决方案不是互联网;这就是“数据铸造”,它被用在了总部位于洛杉矶的“网络自由先锋”(NetFreedom pioneer)的一个项目中。该组织正在通过正常的卫星电视发送数据。伊朗的用户只需将USB连接到他们的接收器,下载数据,并构建一个特殊的应用程序来解压数据。在这个包里,有我们推荐给人们的新闻和所有这些规避工具。所以有一些解决方案。不幸的是,它们在大规模分布时并不可靠。但我们需要投入和寻找更多的人力、技术和资金资源来研究,看看我们如何找到一个可以大规模使用的解决方案。 我们得研究一下这个全国网络看看如何绕过它。不同的互联网自由社区正在进行许多研究,我们正在与他们合作。我们找到了一些解决方案——但其中一个问题是:当互联网关闭时,每个人都在关注它。一切结束后,所有人都要回归正常生活。这不是我们需要的心态。对于互联网关闭,我们必须做的最重要的事情是在互联网关闭之前做好准备。关于这种情况,还有什么是需要了解的?国际社会认为这只是伊朗的问题。但问题是:世界上有很多政府想要侵犯我们的权利,他们互相学习。我想看到的是人们关注正在发生的对自由的威胁,对访问互联网的权利的威胁,并以这种方式处理它。因为如果明天中国和俄罗斯实施和伊朗一样的基础设施,互联网就不会是我们今天所知道的互联网了。它会是一堆孤岛的形状。而互联网背后的理念——连接人们彼此——也将被摧毁。
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