Just got finished reading this analysis of Iran’s government-run firewall. Based on his measurements of inbound/outbound traffic types, the author came to a conclusion:

While the rapidly evolving Iranian firewall has blocked web, video and most forms of interactive communication, not all Internet applications appear impacted. Interestingly, game protocols like xbox and World of Warcraft show little evidence of government manipulation.

Good to know some people are hiding out from the madness with their level 80 shamans. Are World of Warcraft or Xbox Live already being employed as the next great means of covert communication, with Iranians telling their stories through crowded chat-logs full of gold-farming requests? Or are these measurements moot, merely proving that Iran’s gamers have consistently hidden in their homes, plugged into the addictive ignorance of self-entertainment both before and after the election?

14 replies on “Iran: For the Horde”

  1. The most important question is: Are they still able to receive ads for fake viagra, low-cost mortgages, and nigerian bank schemes?

  2. See also: NedaNet, a “network of hackers formed to support the democratic revolution in Iran. [NedaNet’s] mission is to help the Iranian people by setting up networks of proxy severs, anonymizers, and any other appropriate technologies that can enable them to communicate and organize — a network beyond the censorship or control of the Iranian regime”. As of a few days ago, the public face of this project is Eric S. Raymond.

  3. This is a huge, huge loophole. Speaking as a gamer, (EQII, not WoW) these games feature rich chat clients, including voice chat options. Twitter is of course available with battery powered mobile devices, but the character limit cuts down on the information which can be passed along. MMORPGs offer a much richer environment for communication, but of course users will be limited to those with moderate to high end gear and a stable internet connection and electricity.

    I recall back in the final dark days of the Bush administration, there was some chatter coming out of the Department of Homeland Security (and for the life of me, I can’t find the reference – I might have heard it on NPR) that there was concern that MMORPGs could be used as communication hubs for terrorists. There was much humor about the need to eavesdrop on raidchat…

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