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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iranian State Goes Offline To Dodge Cyber-Attacks
2012-08-06
Iran is to move key ministries and state bodies off the worldwide internet next month in an effort to shield them behind a secure computer wall from disruptive cyber attacks like the Stuxnet and Flame viruses.
Probably a smart move, given that they've promised to wipe out those nasty juices...
They still need a way to talk to each other. Stuxnet will find a way...
Reza Taghipour, the country's telecommunications minister, said the step was being taken because sensitive intelligence was vulnerable on the worldwide web, which he said was untrustworthy because it was controlled by "one or two" countries hostile to Iran
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"The establishment of the national intelligence network will create a situation where the precious intelligence of the country won't be accessible to these powers," Mr Taghipour told a conference on Sunday at Tehran's Amir Kabir University.

He described the move as the first phase of a project to replace the global internet with a domestic intranet system scheduled to be completed within 18 months.

Opponents have previously denounced the plan as a means of stamping out western influence on the internet while further tightening already stringent online surveillance of political activists and regime critics.

While Iranian officials have repeatedly spoken about creating their own alternative to the internet, the latest announcement follows the upheaval wreaked by Stuxnet and Flame, both of which are believed to have been developed jointly by the US and Israel.

Stuxnet, discovered in 2010, caused extensive damage to Iran's uranium enrichment programme, which Iran insists is peaceful despite the west's suspicions that it is designed to produce an atomic bomb.

Flame, detected this year, was an even more sophisticated virus that is believed to have targeted Iran's oil ministry and main export terminal.

Nima Rashedan, an Iranian cyber-security specialist based in the Czech Republic, said the domestic network was unlikely to be effective. "In terms of cyber security, Iran is one of the most backward countries I know," he said. "Because of the dis-functionality of the government, I don't think they will be able to implement it properly.
Posted by:trailing wife

#8  "In terms of cyber security, Iran is one of the most backward countries I know,"

this is what happens when your only passwords are 'jihad' and 'allah'
Posted by: lord garth   2012-08-06 14:29  

#7  Wouldn't want to be caught at Natantz with a thumb drive.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2012-08-06 12:18  

#6  See previous Rant posting [2012-08-03] on "Missile Defense Staff Warned To Stop Surfing P**n Sites". Good luck with that. Heh(c)Glenn Reynolds.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2012-08-06 08:41  

#5  There's always sneaker curly-toed-slipper net!
Posted by: CrazyFool   2012-08-06 08:06  

#4  Sounds like a win-win for the Mad Mullahs - keep out the outsiders, keep a much better watch on the insiders.

Unless someone finds a way in/out.
Posted by: Bobby   2012-08-06 06:02  

#3  Their own version of the internet sounds like hacker heaven.
Posted by: phil_b   2012-08-06 04:49  

#2  Ah, the bigwigs always want their back-doors, don't they?
Posted by: mojo   2012-08-06 01:50  

#1  
Posted by: junkiron   2012-08-06 01:40  

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