Iran protests: Authorities charge 1,000 people over Tehran unrest BBC- Oct 31st 2022 By David Gritten BBC News About 1,000 people in Tehran have...
Human Rights
Security forces tear gas students defying Iran protest ultimatum Reuters -Oct 30th 2022 By: Parisa Hafezi DUBAI, Oct 30 (Reuters) – Protests in Iran...
Head of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards warns protesters ‘today is the final day of unrest’ The Guardian – Oct 29th 2022 The head of Iran’s...
Exclusive: United States to put United Nations focus on Iran protests Reuters – Oct 28th 2022 By Michelle Nichols 12 UNITED NATIONS, Oct 28 (Reuters)...
IRAN’S SECRET MANUAL FOR TRACKING AND CONTROLLING PROTESTERS’ MOBILE PHONES Intercept -Oct 27th 2022 Sam Biddle, Murtaza Hussain AS FURIOUS ANTI-GOVERNMENT protests swept Iran, the authorities retaliated...
What really happened to Nika Shahkarami? Witnesses to her final hours cast doubt on Iran’s story CNN-Oct 27th2022 By Gianluca Mezzofiore, Katie Polglase and Adam Pourahmadi A black-clad...
At least 15 killed in attack on Shi’ite shrine in Iran – state news agency Rueters -Oct 26th 2022 By Parisa Hafezi DUBAI, Oct...
Iran’s security forces reportedly open fire as thousands mourn Mahsa Amini
Teargas also used against protesters gathered in hometown of 22-year-old Kurdish woman, says rights...
‘Everyone thinks we have magic powers’: Biden seeks a balance on Iran Politico – 10/25/2022 By NAHAL TOOSI President Joe Biden faces growing calls from...
US envoy Malley lambasted for saying Iranians protesting for ‘respect’ from regime Al Arabia NEWS -Oct 23rd 2022 Yaghoub Fazeli, US Special Envoy for...
Iran’s atomic energy organization says e-mail was hacked Reuters -Oct 23rd 2022 DUBAI, Oct 23 (Reuters) – Iran’s atomic energy organization said that an e-mail...

Iran protests: Authorities charge 1,000 people over Tehran unrest
Security forces tear gas students defying Iran protest ultimatum
Head of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards warns protesters ‘today is the final day of unrest’
Exclusive: United States to put United Nations focus on Iran protests
IRAN’S SECRET MANUAL FOR TRACKING AND CONTROLLING PROTESTERS’ MOBILE PHONES Intercept -Oct 27th 2022 Sam Biddle, Murtaza Hussain AS FURIOUS ANTI-GOVERNMENT protests swept Iran, the authorities retaliated with both brute force and digital repression. Iranian mobile and internet users reported rolling network blackouts, mobile app restrictions, and other disruptions. Many expressed fears that the government can track their activities through their indispensable and ubiquitous smartphones. Iran’s tight grip on the country’s connection to the global internet has proven an effective tool for suppressing unrest. The lack of clarity about what technological powers are held by the Iranian government — one of the most opaque and isolated in the world — has engendered its own form of quiet terror for prospective dissidents. Protesters have often been left wondering how the government was able to track down their locations or gain access to their private communications — tactics that are frighteningly pervasive but whose mechanisms are virtually unknown. While disconnecting broad swaths of the population from the web remains a favored blunt instrument of Iranian state censorship, the government has far more precise, sophisticated tools available as well. Part of Iran’s data clampdown may be explained through the use of a system called “SIAM,” a web program for remotely manipulating cellular connections made available to the Iranian Communications Regulatory Authority. The existence of SIAM and details of how the system works, reported here for the first time, are laid out in a series of internal documents from an Iranian cellular carrier that were obtained by The Intercept. According to these internal documents, SIAM is a computer system that works behind the scenes of Iranian cellular networks, providing its operators a broad menu of remote commands to alter, disrupt, and monitor how customers use their phones. The tools can slow their data connections to a crawl, break the encryption of phone calls, track the movements of individuals or large groups, and produce detailed metadata summaries of who spoke to whom, when, and where. Such a system could help the government invisibly quash the ongoing protests — or those of tomorrow — an expert who reviewed the SIAM documents told The Intercept. Read more on the original: https://theintercept.com/2022/10/28/iran-protests-phone-surveillance/
What really happened to Nika Shahkarami? Witnesses to her final hours cast doubt on Iran’s story
At least 15 killed in attack on Shi’ite shrine in Iran – state news agency
Iran’s security forces reportedly open fire as thousands mourn Mahsa Amini
‘Everyone thinks we have magic powers’: Biden seeks a balance on Iran
US envoy Malley lambasted for saying Iranians protesting for ‘respect’ from regime