Judicial Official Announces Order to Block Instagram Less Than a Year After Banning Telegram Messaging Appرسمی دادگستری اعلام کرد که اینستاگرام را کمتر از یک سال پس از ممنوعیت پیام تلگراف ممنوع کرده است
JANUARY
4, 2019
Judicial Order Tied to
Previously Undeclared Policy of App Usage Level
Eight months after
Iran blocked the
country’s most widely used messaging app, Telegram,
a deputy prosecutor has announced a judicial order to also filter Instagram due
to what he described as over-usage of the social media app.
Instagram had not been
blocked as of January 4, 2018, and it is unknown when the order will go into
effect.
While Twitter and Facebook
were blocked in
2009 and Telegram in 2018, Instagram remained accessible throughout the country
without the use of censorship circumvention tools (such as virtual private
networks), resulting in millions of Iranians, including state officials,
businesses and celebrities relying on the app to reach their followers.
If Instagram is blocked,
users will only be able to access it via VPNs, which can make access spotty,
slow and cumbersome. It is unknown exactly how many people use Instagram in
Iran but according to figures published by the online statistics research
site Statista,
the app had 23 million users in the country as of October 2018. If those
figures are correct, it would make Iran the country with the eight highest
Instagram usages.
A “Certain Level” Cap?
While announcing the
judicial order to filter Instagram in an interview with
the monthly Peyvast magazine on January 1, 2019, Deputy Prosecutor General in
Charge of Cyberspace Javad Javidnia said, “Based on the Supreme Council
of Cyberspace’s [the highest state authority in internet
policy-making] decisions, the traffic on Instagram was not supposed to go
higher than a certain level but unfortunately, it did.”
The secretary general of
the Supreme Council of Cyberspace (SCC), Abolhassan Firouzabadi, reports
directly to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who maintains oversight and control
over the SCC’s policies and actions.
The judiciary itself also
has the power to shut down websites or applications, order the deletion of
content, and order filtering, as do the country’s cyber police.
Javidnia, who only
recently took over the job from Abdolsamad
Khorramabadi, did not specify the “certain level” cap on Instagram
usage. His comment also marks the first time an Iranian official has mentioned
on record that there is a limit on the app’s usage in the country.
No Opposition from Rouhani
Administration
Before starting his new job in
2017, the head of Iran’s Ministry of Information and Communications Technology
(Telecommunications Ministry), Mohammad
Javad Azari Jahromi, had suggested in his social media postings that
he was a proponent of improving internet access in the Islamic Republic, a
claim also touted by Jahromi’s boss, President Hassan Rouhani, during both his
election campaigns.
But in response to
Javidnia’s statements, Jahromi only questioned what would happen next.
“Our assumption is that
what the deputy prosecutor general has said is correct and filtering Instagram
is within his legal authority, but it raises this question: What’s
supposed to happen next?” Jahromi told reporters on
January 2. “They should clarify this matter for the people and avoid polarizing
the issue into those who are for or against filtering.”
“They should tell the
people what will happen the day after filtering Instagram: Will it have any
impact on people’s lives or the state? Will it reduce crime? There has to be
some logic behind this decision,” he added.
Like many other Iranian
officials, Jahromi relies on Instagram to reach large audiences (174,000
followers as of January 4) as well as access online content that is otherwise
officially unavailable in Iran.
Iranian officials
including the supreme leader have unabashedly continued to use all social media
apps that have been banned for average citizens in Iran, so it remains unclear
whether these officials will be subjected to any restrictions once the ban goes
into effect.
The banning of Telegram,
which according to the company had 40 million monthly users in Iran as of May
2018, resulted in more users turning to Instagram for their social media needs,
especially businesses that rely on it for advertising products and services.
The order to ban Instagram
is accordingly part of the state’s ongoing assault on internet freedom in Iran,
where the rights of the Iranian people to information access and internet
privacy, both integral to the fundamental right of freedom of expression,
continue to be severely violated.
Separate Access Fee for
Using Instagram?
One week before the order
to ban instagram was announced, Telecommunications Ministry Spokesman Jamal
Hadian tweeted a
confidential letter signed by Hossein Fallah Joshaghani, the head of the
Communications Regulatory Authority (CRA), ordering Internet Service Providers
(ISPs) to only allow access to Instagram as a separate, chargeable product.
If the state agency’s
order had been carried out, Iranian consumers would have to pay extra for
accessing the social media app, which is normally free, on their mobile phones
or via their personal Wi-Fi networks.
Asked whether Instagram
would ultimately be filtered before the judicial order had been announced,
Deputy Telecommunications Minister Amir Nazemi told a reporter on
December 22, “This matter has not been approved by the authorities but some
individuals are strongly determined to make it happen.”
Three days later, Jahromi
called the order “useless” while suggesting a different way to censor content.
“In a meeting I had with
communication specialists, they held the view that the CRA’s order was useless
because, first of all, it will increase the use of online circumvention tools,
and, secondly, we can achieve our goals by encouraging the use of parental
control software instead,” tweeted the
telecommunications minister on December 25.
“This view is correct and it is necessary to
revise the order,” added Jahromi, who is extremely active on social media.
It is not clear what
happened to the CRA’s order or whether Iranians will one day be told to pay to
access Instagram. What is clear is that days after the order to ban the app was
announced, no Iranian official including Jahromi has tried to block the order.
The same holds true eight
months after Telegram was blocked in Iran.
Banning Instagram or
requiring users to pay extra to access the app is a violation of net neutrality principles,
which advocate free and unfettered internet usage without limitations,
regulations or prohibitions.
Iran had already massively
violated those principles after it officially launched its National
Information Network in December 2017, resulting in internet
access fees being determined not only by data usage but also by the kind of
content (state-approved or not) users accessed.
“Is There Anything Else
Left for You to Filter?”
After news of the pending
ban began to spread on Iranian social media, some users condemned the judicial
order as well as the telecommunications minister.
“If our young Minister Mr.
Azari Jahromi keeps moving in this direction and firmly continues the filtering
after doing it to Telegram and Instagram, he can put a star on his jacket
sleeve for banning 10 popular messaging apps and social media networks before
the year 1400 [on the Iranian calendar, March 2021],” tweeted web
design Saman Barary on January 2.
Iranian citizen Kourosh
Ziaie meanwhile tweeted:
“So let’s say you filter Instagram, too. Will you be able to filter people’s
thoughts, as well? Will it solve society’s problems? Will it solve
unemployment? Will it solve these gentlemen’s financial corruption? Will it
make you feel better? Is there anything else left for you to filter?”
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