The U.S. government approved the
export to Iran of software designed to help citizens avoid
government censorship of their Internet use, according to the
program’s developer, the Censorship Research Center.
The “Haystack” software lets Internet users hide their
identities and use Web sites -- such as Google Inc.’s YouTube,
Facebook Inc., and Twitter Inc. -- that are blocked by the
government, the San Francisco-based non-profit group said in a
statement on its Web site.
“We hope to keep the Internet open,” the center’s
executive director, Austin Heap, said in a telephone interview.
“We can start very seriously to support the people within Iran,
and those who keep the dialogue going -- the bloggers, the
citizen journalists.”
The group applied for a license because the U.S. prohibits
most exports to Iran unless they are approved by the Treasury
Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control.
The center developed the software in response to a
crackdown on Internet use by the Iranian government after last
year’s disputed presidential election, Heap said.
Heap said the license was issued March 19. That day,
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said in an interview with
Bloomberg Television that the U.S. had approved an application
that would boost Internet access for Iranians, without
identifying the entity that sought the license.
The program lets people in Iran use the Internet “as if
there were no Iranian government filters,” Heap said.
Anti-Censorship Education
The center was co-founded by Heap in 2009 to provide anti-
censorship education, outreach, and technologies, according to
its Web site.
After the re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in
June 2009 balloting, the Iranian opposition used the Internet to
organize demonstrations and spread its message.
Police have told opposition activists that their e-mails and
mobile-phone text messages are monitored. Iran is among a number
of countries identified as “enemies of the Internet 2010,” a
list drawn up by Reporters Without Borders.
Almost 32 percent of Iranians have access to the Internet,
according to a 2008 estimate by the International
Telecommunication Union, a United Nations agency in Geneva.
To contact the reporter on this story:
Ali Sheikholeslami in London at
alis2@bloomberg.net.