[...: Re: Un-Civil Unrest in Iraq and it's Intertubz go DOWN]
On Wed, Oct 02, 2019 at 07:21:53PM -0700, Razer wrote:
"Network data from the NetBlocks internet observatory show that Facebook, Twitter, WhatsApp, Instagram and other social and messaging apps have been blocked in Iraq by multiple internet providers as of 12:30 UTC, Wednesday 2 October 2019.
Is that a tear I hear for "poor" Iraqis from you there Razer? Caring about some desert semite cousins all of a sudden?
The restrictions come just as hundreds have been reported wounded as police fire tear gas, bullets at protesters.
Sounds like a tear jerk :) Or am I confused and this is just social virtue signalling?
Technical measurements show that each of the services have been intentionally restricted by leading Iraqi network operators including Earthlink, Asiacell and Zain in a manner consistent with previous incidents of censorship in the country. Findings are based on a set of technical measurements from across the country assessing reachability and network performance.
Ohoh! No shit! 1. Israel bombs the crap out of "Greater Israel" - aka Iraq 2. a massive info psy op against "Greater Israel" - aka Iraq - is attempted in parallel, and 3. the Iraqi gov shuts down their Internet. And the precious? Now (((some folks))) are complaining. HA! What a firetrucking surprise. Made my day chuckle worth though :D Got anuddah for us Rayzer? Like an utterly pointless drone attack on a Saudi oil refinery? Or how about a chroline or sarin gas bomb on completely unarmed civilians and children with a convenient White Hat film crew on hand to "hose down the chillun"... Damnably ridiculous and STILL played off as real by CNN... ARE YOU NOT ENTERTAINED ALREADY ? !! MWAHAHAHAHHAAAAAA !!! Rayzer - from the front lines of the Info Psy-op For everything else, there's Russkies :D PS: Rayzer, less psilocibin rations for you boy-oh, this one was such a piss poor effort I can smell ya mushies from Austraya mate!
Update: Internet access has been cut across much of Iraq including Baghdad as of 17:00 UTC, following the earlier blocking of social media platforms. NetBlocks diffscan measurements which map the IP space of a country show significant impact across multiple providers. Nationwide connectivity has fallen below 70% and outages continue to spread:
Update: As of 19:30 UTC Iraq has gone largely offline amid widening mass-protests, with the situation on the ground unclear due to blackouts. Real-time network data show approximately 75% of the country including Baghdad is now offline, excluding autonomous regions which operate their own networks:
Instances of network filtering and outages present a significant challenge to media freedom and the rights to free assembly and free association in Iraq.
Why are Iraqis protesting? Demonstrators are out on the streets over unemployment, corruption and poor public services, focused in capital Baghdad but also impacting other cities around Iraq.
The protests have escalated after police opened fire in the air as some 3,000 protesters tried to cross a bridge leading into Baghdad’s fortified Green Zone, where government buildings and foreign embassies are based.
Is the internet down in Iraq? Yes, largely. Restrictions were initially limited to specific online platforms and at first there was no sign of a wider nationwide internet blackout. However total outages began from 17:00 UTC, and by 19:30 UTC much of Iraq fell offline (see updates, above).
Geographic impact covers Iraq’s centrally administered cities including Baghdad, while independent zones such as the Kurdish northern cities are governed under a different system unaffected by the restrictions.
Iraq has previously extended social media disruptions to total shutdowns, hence the situation has been considered volatile by the observatory from its onset.
On Wednesday afternoon, WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger remained partially usable via mobile phones on some of the affected networks for some time. This is due to circumvention measures and alternative messaging protocols built into recent versions of the mobile apps. In such cases service quality and performance of media, photo and video transfers are generally degraded.
Background NetBlocks has previously identified the total blocking of internet access as well as partial restrictions affecting social media platforms through recent years. Civil society group SMEX has campaigned for rights-based internet governance in the region."
https://netblocks.org/reports/iraq-blocks-facebook-twitter-whatsapp-and-inst... Rr Sent from my Androgyne dee-vice with K-9 Mail
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Zenaan Harkness